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Extraterritoriality and collective redress / edited by Duncan Fairgrieve & Eva Lein.
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Title:Extraterritoriality and collective redress / edited by Duncan Fairgrieve & Eva Lein.
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Other Contributors/Collections:Fairgrieve, Duncan.
Lein, Eva.
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Published/Created:Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2012.
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Holdings
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Location:LAW LIBRARY (level 3)Where is this?
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Call Number: K2243 .E98 2012
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Number of Items:1
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Status:Available
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Location:LAW LIBRARY (level 3)Where is this?
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Library of Congress Subjects:Class actions (Civil procedure)
Exterritoriality.
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Edition:1st ed.
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Description:xli, 447 pages ; 26 cm
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Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
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ISBN:9780199655724
0199655723
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Contents:Machine generated contents note: I. COLLECTIVE REDRESS MECHANISMS IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
1. Class Actions and Collective Actions / Diego Corapi
I. Introduction
II. United States Model and Its Influence on Other Regimes
III. Developments Within the United States Model
IV. Conclusion
2. Collective Redress Procedures: European Debates / Geraint Howells
I. Introduction
II. Developments at a National Level
III. EU Response
IV. Conclusion
3. Collective Action Reform in England and Wales / John Sorabji
I. Introduction
II. 1987-2004: The Long Road to Reform
III. 2004-10: Flattering to Deceive, Reform's False Dawn
IV. Conclusion
4. Class Actions and Class Settlements Going Global: the Netherlands / Helene van Lith
I. Introduction
II. Dutch System of Collective Redress
III. Cross-border Mass Disputes
-The WCAM Going Global
IV. Complementary Role of the WCAM
V. Unanticipated Problems with Going Global
VI. Recognition and Enforcement of United States Judgments
VII. Conclusion
5. Collective Redress: Policy Objectives and Practical Problems / Alexander Layton
I. Introduction
II. Policy Objectives
III. Practical Problems
IV. Conclusions
II. PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND COLLECTIVE REDRESS
6. Coherent Approach to European Collective Redress / Burkhard Hess
I. Introduction
II. Different Perspectives and Objectives of Law-making
III. Conclusion
7. Trouble with Cross-Border Collective Redress: Issues and Difficulties / Horatia Muir Watt
I. Introduction
II. Sources of Resistance
III. New Directions?
8. Cross-Border Collective Redress and Jurisdiction under Brussels I: A Mismatch / Eva Lein
I. Introduction
II. One Court for All: Concentration of Jurisdiction under Brussels I
III. Too Many Courts Spoil the Broth: Dispersed Jurisdiction under Brussels I
IV. Magic Trick? Article 6(1) Brussels I Regulation
V. Can the Parties Decide?
VI. Conclusions and Perspectives
9. Parallel Litigation and Cross-Border Collective Actions under the Brussels I Framework: Lessons from Abroad / Justine N Stefanelli
I. Introduction
II. Lis Pendens and Related Actions under the Brussels I Regulation
III. Collective Actions and Parallel Proceedings
IV. Proposed Amendments to the Brussels I Regulation
V. Suggestions for Reform
VI. Conclusion
10. Impact of the Brussels I Enforcement and Recognition Rules on Collective Actions / Duncan Fairgrieve
I. Introduction
II. Scheme of Brussels I
III. Notion of Ordre Public under Brussels I, Article 34(1)
IV. Approach in Individual Member States: Public Policy and Collective Redress
V. Article 34(2): Procedural Issues
VI. Article 34(3): Irreconcilability
VII. Conclusion
11. Conflicts of Laws in Multinational Collective Actions
-a Judicial Nightmare? / Astrid Stadler
I. Introduction
II. Choice of Law and European Mass Litigation
III. Possible Solutions
IV. Conclusion
12. Extraterritoriality of Evidence Gathering in US Class Action Proceedings / Andrea Pinna
I. Introduction
II. Scope of Extraterritoriality of United States Discovery
III. Conflict between Extraterritorial United States Discovery Rules and Foreign Laws
IV. Conclusion
13. ILA Rio Resolution on Transnational Group Actions / Catherine Kessedjian
I. Introduction
II. Resolution of the 2008 ILA Rio de Janeiro Conference
III. Factors Determining the Type of Procedure
IV. Analysis of the Resolution
V. Conclusion
14. In Defence of the Requirement for Foreign Class Members to Opt In to an English Class Action / Rachael Mulheron
I. Introduction
II. Draft Statutory Framework
III. Requiring Non-domiciled Class Members to Opt In: Key Canadian Precedent
IV. Further Support Derived from Some Key United States Decisions
V. Conclusion
III. RECEPTION OF FOREIGN COLLECTIVE REDRESS AND PUNITIVE DAMAGES DECISION IN NATIONAL JURISDICTIONS
15. Foreign Punitive Damages Decisions and Class Actions in Italy / Francesco Quarta
I. Introduction
II. Compatibility of US Class Action Procedure with European Jurisprudence
III. Conclusion
16. Perils of Certifying International Class Actions in Canada / John P Brown
I. Introduction
II. Traditional Judgment Recognition Rules Are Inadequate for Enforcing Multi-jurisdictional Class Action Judgments
III. Why the `Real and Substantial Connection' Test Should Not Be Applied to Absent Foreign Claimants
IV. `Real and Substantial Connection' Test
-Applied Rigorously
V. Canadian Courts Should Not Certify Multi-jurisdictional Opt-out Classes
VI. Conclusion
17. Collective Redress in Spain: Recognition and Enforcement of Class Action Judgments and Class Settlements / Marta Otero Crespo
I. Introduction
II. Collective Redress in Spain
III. Recognition and Enforcement in Spain
IV. Conclusion
IV. EXTRATERRITORIALITY AND US LAW
18. Morrison v National Australia Bank: The US Supreme Court Limits Collective Redress for Securities Fraud / Thomas A Dubbs
I. Introduction
II. Facts of Morrison
III. Court's Opinion and the Presumption Against Extraterritoriality
IV. Conclusion
19. Morrison v National Australia Bank: Implications for Global Securities Class Actions / Linda J Silberman
I. Introduction
II. Background of Morrison
III. Morrison Decision
IV. Presumption Against Extraterritoriality in Morrison
V. Influence of Comity Concerns in Morrison
VI. Implications for Global Class Actions Post-Morrison
VII. Conclusion
20. Morrison v National Australia Bank: Foreign Securities and the Jurisdiction to Prescribe / Adam Johnson
I. Introduction
II. Choice of Law and Jurisdiction
III. International Jurisdiction
IV. Extraterritorial Application of United States Law
V. International Comity and the Approach in England
VI. Conclusion
21. `Bridging the Gap': Contrasting Effects of US Supreme Court Territorial Restraint on European Collective Claims / Vincent Smith
I. Introduction: Morrison and Empagran
II. How Might this New Situation Affect Collective Claims in Europe?
III. Conclusion: Increasing Collective Claims in Europe?
22. Transnational Issuer Liability after the Financial Crisis: Seeking a Coherent Choice of Law Standard / Alexander Hellgardt
I. Introduction
II. International Securities Class Actions
III. Classification of Primary Capital Markets Duties
IV. Current State of the Conflict of Laws Discussion
V. Suggested Solution: Synchronism between Duties and Liability
VI. Implications
VII. Conclusion.