The State of the Art and Shifting Meaning of Legal Certainty Mark Fenwick, Mathias Siems and Stefan Wrbka Part I: Theoretical Perspectives (‘Certainty of Law’) 1. Legal Certainty and the European Courts: Accessibility and Legitimate Expectations as Standards of Reasonableness Patricia Popelier 2. Legal Certainty in the Context of Multilingualism Elina Paunio 3. Legal Certainty in the New Corporate Criminal Law Mark Fenwick 4. Economic Analysis of Law and Wilburg’s Flexible System: A Systematic Approach to European Tort Law Monika Hinteregger Part II: Comparative Perspectives 5. Comparative Legal Certainty: Legal Families and Forms of Measurement Mathias Siems 6. The Faces and Implications of Legal Certainty in Contemporary Private Law—A Comparative Law Perspective Stefan Wrbka 7. Legal Certainty: A Common Law View and a Critique John Linarelli 8. Measuring Legal Certainty? Critical Feedback about the Development of an Index of Legal Certainty Jonas Knetsch Part III: Transnational Perspectives 9. Clashing Legal Certainties: The Danish Supreme Court’s Ruling in AJOS and the Collision between Domestic Rules and EU Principles Mikael Rask Madsen and Henrik Palmer Olsen 10. Towards Appropriate Legal Certainty for Consumers Seeking Justice in a Globalised World Geraint Howells and Mateja Durovic 11. Legal Certainty and Abuse of Loopholes in the Context of Transnational EU Company Law Lisa Jost, Gabriel M Lentner, Thomas Ratka and Stefan Wrbka Part IV: Applied Perspectives (‘Certainty through Law’) 12. Legal Ambiguity in Corporate Governance Charlotte Villiers 13. The Right of Withdrawal in Consumer Contracts: From the Perspective of Legal Certainty Yo Terakawa 14. Advertising Regulation in Japan: Legal Certainty and its Relation to Consumer Law Kunihiro Nakata
This edited collection brings together research from various common law and civil law jurisdictions on a range of substantive areas of law that share a common interest in understanding the multi-layered challenges of defining legal certainty in the context of legal and political modernity.
Mark Fenwick is Professor at the Graduate School of Law, Kyushu University, Japan. Mathias Siems is Professor of Commercial Law at Durham Law School, Durham University, UK. Stefan Wrbka is Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Law, Kyushu University, Japan.
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