Course title:
Neptun code:
Type (core, specialization, optional, dissertation, other):
Lecture/ Seminar (practical); hours per week:
Name and position of lecturer:
Contact of lecturer:
Prerequisite course(s):
Language of the course:
Suggested semester: autumn /spring, 1-6 Number of credits:
Requirements (exam/practical mark/signature/report, essay):
Course objectives (50-100 words):
Course structure: Week Topic
1. Subject of the Private International Law
2. Legal unification onf the field of Private International Law
3. Links for right in rem and intellectual property 4. Links for contracts in case of choice of law 5. Links for contracts without choice of law, Rome I
6. Applicable law for responsibility out of delictual legal relations, Rome II
7. Legal regulaitons of family law, Rome III
8. Regulations of the collisions of law of succession, Rome IV 9. Rules of qualification and preliminary issue
10. Renvoi and the problems of application of foreign law 11. Recognition and enforcement of foreign legal decisions 12. Basic issues of international commercial arbitration 13. Consultation
Required readings:
Recommended readings:
Evaluation method:
exam
1, Pippa Rogerson Coflict of Laws, Cambridge University Press, 2013 2. Yearbook of Private International Law Volume XIII (2011) Edited by:
Andera Bonomi, Gian Paolo Romano, Sellier European Law Publishers, 2012 Rome Conventions 1-2-3-4
The objective of the course is to highlight the current achievements on the field of private international law both on Hungarian and European level.
Emphasis is laid on the legal sources of the European Union, the so called Rome Regulations. With the help of the course, students will be able detect the presence of the relevant foreign element in legal relations and learn how to solve the collision.
English core Course Description
Private International Law
joggodfa@uni-miskolc.hu Mátyás, Imre assoiate professor 2