Acaba de `publicarse en la editorial Edward Elgar la 2ª edición de la obra "Conflict of Laws and the Internet", de la que es autor Pedro A. de Miguel Asensio.
In this thoroughly revised second edition, Pedro De Miguel Asensio presents a practical analysis of jurisdiction, choice of law, and recognition and enforcement of judgments in the context of online activities, examining areas where private legal relationships are most affected by the Internet. Addressing the tension between the ubiquity of the Internet and the territorial nature of national legal orders, the author sets out the latest developments across multiple jurisdictions in this dynamic field.
Extracto del índice de la obra:
1. FOUNDATIONS
I. INTERNET REGULATION AND PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW
1. Cyberlaw, transnational law and self-regulation
2. Significance of conflict of lawsII. INTERNATIONAL JURISDICTION
1. Introduction
2. Brussels Ia Regulation
3. Comparative perspectives: United States
4. International developmentsIII. APPLICABLE LAW
1. General overview
2. The Rome Regulations
3. Comparative perspectivesIV. RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF JUDGMENTS
1. Main features
2. European Union
3. International developments2. DIGITAL SERVICES, INTERNAL MARKET, AND CONTENT LIABILITY
I. CROSS-BORDER INFORMATION SOCIETY SERVICES
1. Definition and significance
2. Basic legal framework
3. Place of establishment and territorial constraintsII. INTERPLAY WITH THE INTERNAL MARKET
1. Country-of-origin principle
2. Geo-blocking RegulationIII. DIGITAL SERVICES AND ONLINE CONTENT
1. Digital Services Act
2. Other Union InstrumentsIV. INTERMEDIARY LIABILITY REGIME
1. Implications
2. Safe harbour immunities
3. Digital Services ActV. INTERNET TORTS AND EU PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW
1. General observations
2. Jurisdiction
3. Choice of law
4. Territorial scope of orders against illegal content3. DATA PROTECTION AND PERSONALITY RIGHTS INCLUDING DEFAMATION
I. TRANSBORDER DATA PROTECTION AND THE INTERNET
1. Data protection as a fundamental right
2. Basic features of EU data protection law
3. Data protection enforcement and conflict of laws
4. Cross-border transfers of dataII. TERRITORIAL SCOPE OF APPLICATION
1. Article 3 GDPR: significance and content
2. Establishment of the controller or processor
3. Targeting criterion
4. Territorial limits of rights and remediesIII. CROSS-BORDER PROCESSING AND SUPERVISORY AUTHORITIES
1. Cross-border processing under the GDPR
2. One-stop-shop mechanism
3. Complaints with a supervisory authority and judicial remediesIV. CIVIL CLAIMS AGAINST A CONTROLLER OR A PROCESSOR
1. Private enforcement and collective redress
2. Jurisdiction
3. Lis pendens and related actions
4. Choice of lawV. PERSONALITY RIGHTS INCLUDING DEFAMATION: JURISDICTION
1. Libel tourism, SLAPP and other challenges
2. Brussels Ia Regulation
3. Comparative perspectivesVI. PERSONALITY RIGHTS INCLUDING DEFAMATION: CHOICE OF LAW
1. Characterisation
2. Lack of harmonization at EU level
3. Future perspectivesVII. RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF JUDGMENTS
1. Introduction
2. Verification of jurisdiction
3. Public policy4. COPYRIGHT AND RELATED RIGHTS
I. INTERNATIONAL AND EU COPYRIGHT LAW
1. International protection of copyright
2. European Union: comparative perspectivesII. JURISDICTION
1. Typology of cases: infringement claims
2. Lack of exclusive jurisdiction and options under EU law
3. Grounds of potentially unlimited jurisdiction
4. Limited jurisdiction of the courts of the place where the damage occurred
5. Provisional measuresIII. CHOICE OF LAW
1. Uniform rules and their limits
2. Ubiquitous infringements
3. Digital Single MarketIV. RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF JUDGMENTS
1. Legal sources
2. Types of judgments
3. Grounds for non-recognition5. INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY AND COMPETITION LAW
I. TRADEMARKS, DESIGNS AND PATENTS: INTERNATIONAL AND EU LAW
1. International cooperation concerning industrial property
2. European UnionII. DOMAIN NAMES
1. Main features
2. ICANN: alternative dispute resolution
3. Domain names under ‘.eu’III. CROSS-BORDER INTERNET ACTIVITIES AND TERRITORIALITY OF IP RIGHTS
1. Use of a sign on the Internet and targeting
2. Exhaustion of rights
3. Online trade and measures against infringing goodsIV. JURISDICTION OVER DISPUTES CONCERNING NATIONAL RIGHTS
1. Exclusive jurisdiction
2. Infringement claims: grounds of potentially unlimited jurisdiction
3. Place where the damage occurredV. UNITARY RIGHTS: SPECIAL JURISDICTION RULES
1. Rationale and structure: general jurisdiction
2. Multiple defendants
3. Place in which the act of infringement has been committed
4. Unified Patent CourtVI. INFRINGEMENT OF INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS: CHOICE OF LAW
1. Territoriality and lex loci protectionis
2. Targeting and interaction with substantive law
3. Unitary rights: trademarks and designs
4. European patents with unitary effectVII. UNFAIR COMPETITION AND ACTS RESTRICTING FREE COMPETITION
1. Unfair competition, trade secrets and IP rights
2. Online activities and competition law
3. Digital Markets Act
4. Jurisdiction
5. Applicable LawVIII. SCOPE OF REMEDIES AND ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN JUDGMENTS
1. Factors influencing the remedies available
2. Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments6. CONTRACTS AND TRANSACTIONS
I. ONLINE CONTRACTS: BASIC LEGAL FRAMEWORK
1. International initiatives
2. European UnionII. CLASSIFICATION
1. Online and offline transactions
2. B2B, B2C and P2P contracts
3. DLT, blockchain and so-called smart contractsIII. JURISDICTION
1. Choice of court agreements
2. Jurisdiction in the absence of choiceIV. CHOICE OF LAW
1. Party autonomy
2. Applicable law in the absence of choice
3. Scope of the law applicable to the contract
4. Overriding mandatory rules and public policy
5. Crypto-marketsV. ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION
1. Introduction
2. Mediation
3. Arbitration and ODR
Ficha:
P.A. de Miguel Asensio
"Conflict of Laws and the Internet" (2nd edition)
Edward Elgar Publishing, 2024
560 pp. - £215.00
ISBN: 978-1-03531-512-3
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario
Los comentarios son responsabilidad exclusiva de su autor. Se reserva el derecho de eliminar cualquier comentario contrario a las leyes o a las normas mínima de convivencia y buena educación.