Handbook European Civil Procedure
A new extensive handbook on European Civil Procedure (eds. Xandra Kramer, Stefaan Voet and Adriani Dori) was just published by De Gruyter Brill. This book offers a comprehensive overview of the overarching themes shaping civil justice in Europe, an overview of key instruments and a broader outlook on the future of European civil procedure.
The book is divided into three parts. Part I deals with the general themes regarding the development of European civil procedure, including the EU competence, historical perspectives, the principles of mutual trust and access to justice as foundational principles, the interaction between European and national civil procedure and innovation and the role of digitalisation in civil procedure. Part II deals with key topics of litigation and other means of dispute resolution. It starts with the service of documents as this is usually the first step in initiating litigation, and following the sequence of the procedure discusses the international jurisdiction, taking of evidence and the recognition and enforcement based on the general EU instruments. Two chapters address international jurisdiction and enforcement in family matters, maintenance, matrimonial property and succession. Uniform debt collection procedures, asset preservation, insolvency proceedings and specialised courts are discussed in separate chapters. The last three chapters focus on ADR and ODR as alternative pathways, collective redress and legal aid, costs and funding of civil litigation. Part III is dedicated to general and future outlooks on European civil procedure, including harmonisation through soft law, the EU enlargement process (Albania, Serbia and Ukraine) and perspectives from non-European jurisdictions (China, South Africa, the United States and Brazil) and wider challenges of European civil procedure. A hybrid launch event, organised by the European Civil Justice Centre, will be held at Leuven University on 25-26 June (information to follow). More information available at the publisher’s website here.
Part I: Introduction and General Perspectives on European Civil Procedure
Chapter 1 Xandra Kramer, Stefaan Voet, and Adriani Dori – Introduction to European Civil Procedure
Chapter 2 Eva Storskrubb – Civil Justice and EU Competence
Chapter 3 Cornelis Hendrik van Rhee – The History of Civil Procedure in Europe
Chapter 4 Matthias Weller – Mutual Trust
Chapter 5 Burkhard Hess – Access to Justice as a Fundamental Principle of European Union Procedural Law
Chapter 6 Alain Ancery and Bart Krans – EU Law and National Civil Procedural Law: A Much Greater Area than at First Glance
Chapter 7 Anna Nylund – Innovation and Digitalisation
Part II: Litigating and Other Means of Dispute Resolution in Europe
Chapter 8 Wendy Kennett – Getting Started: Service of Documents
Chapter 9 Geert van Calster – International Jurisdiction: Fundamental Issues and ‘Principles’ of EU Private International Law
Chapter 10 Pietro Franzina – International Jurisdiction in Civil and Commercial Matters
Chapter 11 Jachin Van Doninck and Wannes Vandenbussche – Taking of Evidence
Chapter 12 Fernando Gascón Inchausti – Recognition and Enforcement: Fundamental Issues
Chapter 13 Wolfgang Hau – Recognition and Enforcement of Civil and Commercial Judgments
Chapter 14 Apostolos Anthimos – International Jurisdiction and Recognition and Enforcement in Family Matters and Maintenance
Chapter 15 Anna Wysocka-Bar – International Jurisdiction and Recognition and Enforcement in Matters of Property Regimes and Succession
Chapter 16 Elena D’Alessandro – Debt Collection and Special Procedures: Small Claims and Orders for Payment
Chapter 17 Carlos Santaló Goris – Asset Preservation and Provisional Measures
Chapter 18 Vesna Lazic – Insolvency Proceedings
Chapter 19 Georgia Antonopoulou – Specialised Courts: The Unified Patent Court and International Commercial Courts
Chapter 20 Emma van Gelder – Alternative Pathways: ADR/ODR
Chapter 21 Eva Lein – Collective Redress
Chapter 22 John Sorabji – Legal Aid, Costs and Funding
Part III: Outlooks on European Harmonisation and Beyond
Chapter 23 Emmanuel Jeuland – Harmonisation Through Soft Law, Common Standards, and Best Practices
Chapter 24 Monika Canco, Ana Harvey, and Iryna Izarova – European Civil Procedure and the EU Enlargement Process
Chapter 25 Magdalena Tulibacka, Peter C.H. Chan, Mohamed Paleker and Eduardo Silva de Freitas – European Civil Procedure From a Non-European Perspective
Chapter 26 Alan Uzelac – Wider Challenges: The EU, Europe, and the World



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