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Köp båda 2 för 1178 krThis book gives a brief survey of the theory of multidimensional (multivariate), weakly stationary time series, with emphasis on dimension reduction and prediction. Understanding the covered material requires a certain mathematical maturity, a deg...
Tams Szabados is Associate Professor at ELTE Etvs Lornd University, Budapest.
1. Introduction I. Economic Sanctions in Private International Law II. The Aim of this Book III. Methodology and the Scope of the Work IV. The Object of the Analysis: Economic Sanctions V. Foreign Policy and Private International Law VI. Adjudicative Rhetoric and Foreign Policy Considerations 2. The Legal Framework for Imposing Economic Sanctions I. The UN Sanctions Regime II. Economic Sanctions in Bilateral and Multilateral Treaties III. Economic Sanctions in EU Law 3. Coherence and Legal Certainty in EU Law I. Coherence in the External Relations Law of the EU II. Legal Certainty and EU Law 4. Economic Sanctions in Private International Law I. Economic Sanctions: State Intervention in Private Law Relationships II. Economic Sanctions as Overriding Mandatory Provisions III. The Treatment of Foreign Public Law in Private Law Litigation IV. Conclusion 5. Economic Sanctions as Overriding Mandatory Provisions in EU Private International Law I. Economic Sanctions Imposed by the Law of the Forum State II. Economic Sanctions of the Lex Causae III. Economic Sanctions in the Law of a Third State Other than the Lex Causae IV. Conclusion 6. The Judicial Practice of the Member States I. France II. Germany III. England and Wales IV. Assessment of the Judicial Practice of the Member States V. The Outcome: A Changeable European Judicial Foreign Policy 7. Blocking Statutes I. Blocking Statutes and Private International Law II. A Conflict of Overriding Mandatory Provisions 8. Deactivation of Economic Sanctions? I. EU Economic Sanctions and Choice-of-Court Agreements II. EU Economic Sanctions and Arbitration Agreements 9. Possible Solutions and Conclusions I. Public Ordering of Contractual Relations Affected by Economic Sanctions II. Private Ordering of Contractual Relations Affected by Economic Sanctions III. The Role of Private International Law IV. Conclusions