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Invitation: The HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention: Prospects for Judicial Cooperation in Civil and Commercial Matters between the EU and Third Countries — Pre-Conference Video Roundtable University of Bonn / HCCH on 29 October 2020
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The HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention:
Prospects for Judicial Cooperation in Civil and
Commercial Matters between the EU and Third Countries
Pre-Conference Video Roundtable
University of Bonn / HCCH
Thursday, 29 October 2020, 6.30 p.m. (UTC+1) (via Zoom)
Speakers:
Dr Christophe Bernasconi, Secretary General of the HCCH
Colin Brown, Unit Dispute Settlement and Legal Aspects of Trade Policy, DG Trade, European Commission
Dr Alexandra Diehl, White & Case LLP, Frankfurt, Chair of the Arbitration/Litigation/Mediation (“ALM”) Working Group of the German-American Lawyers Association (DAJV)
Dr Veronika Efremova, Senior Project Manager GIZ, Open Regional Funds for South East Europe-Legal Reform
Andreas Stein, Head of Unit, DG JUST – A1 “Civil Justice”, European Commission
Dr Jan Teubel, German Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection
Moderators:
Dr João Ribeiro-Bidaoui, First Secretary, HCCH
Prof Dr Matthias Weller, University of Bonn
The largest proportion of EU economic growth in the 21st century is expected to arise in trade with third countries. This is why the EU is building up trade relations with many states and other regional integration communities in all parts of the world. The latest example is the EU-MERCOSUR Association Agreement concluded on 28 June 2019. With the United Kingdom’s exit of the Union on 31 January 2020, extra-EU trade with neighbouring countries will further increase in importance. Another challenge for the EU is China’s “Belt and Road Initiative”, a powerful global development strategy that includes overland as well as sea routes in more than 100 states around the globe. The USA are currently the largest trade partner of the EU. The increasing volume of trade with third states will inevitably lead to a rise in the number and importance of commercial disputes. This makes mechanisms for their orderly and efficient resolution indispensable. China is already setting up infrastructures for commercial dispute resolution alongside its belts and roads. In contrast, the EU still seems to be in search of a strategy for judicial cooperation in civil matters with countries outside the Union. The HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention may be a valuable tool to establish and implement such a strategy, in particular alongside the EU’s external trade relations. These prospects will be discussed by the speakers and a global audience in this Pre-Conference Video Roundtable.
We warmly invite you to participate and discuss with us. In order to do so, please register with sekretariat.weller@jura.uni-bonn.de. You will receive the access data for the video conference via zoom per email, including our data protection concept, the day before the event.
If you have already registered and received a confirmation from our office (please allow us a couple of days for sending it back to you), your registration is valid and you do not need to re-register.
Please do not hesitate to forward our invitation to friends and colleagues if you wish.
Main Conference “The HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention”, 13 and 14 September 2021
Our event intends to prepare the main conference on the HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention at the University of Bonn (Professors Moritz Brinkmann, Nina Dethloff, Matthias Lehmann, Wulf-Henning Roth, Philipp Reuss, Matthias Weller), co-hosted by the HCCH (Dr Chistophe Bernasconi, Dr João Ribeiro-Bidaoui), on 13 and 14 September 2021 (originally scheduled for 25 and 26 September 2020, but rescheduled to avoid Covid-19 risks). At this conference on the campus of the University of Bonn, leading experts will present on the legal concepts and techniques of the Convention, and policy issues will be further developed.
Speakers will include (listed chronologically):
Hans van Loon (key note), Former Secretary General of the Hague Conference on Private International Law, The Hague;
Prof Dr Xandra Kramer, Erasmus University Rotterdam;
Prof Dr Wolfgang Hau, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich;
Prof Dr Pietro Franzina, Catholic University of Milan;
Prof Dr Francisco Garcimartín Alférez, Autonomous University of Madrid;
Dr Ning Zhao, Senior Legal Officer, HCCH;
Prof Paul Beaumont, University of Stirling;
Prof Dr Marie-Elodie Ancel, University Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas;
Dr Pippa Rogerson, Reader in Private International Law, Faculty of Law, Cambridge;
Ass. Prof Dr Ilija Rumenov, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, Macedonia;
Dr Veronica Ruiz Abou-Nigm, Director of Internationalisation, Senior Lecturer in International Private Law, School of Law, University of Edinburgh;
Prof Zheng (Sophia) Tang, University of Newcastle;
Jose Angelo Estrella-Faria, Principal Legal Officer and Head, Legislative Branch International Trade Law Division, Office of Legal Affairs, United Nations, Former Secretary General of UNIDROIT.
For the full programme see https://www.jura.uni-bonn.de/professur-prof-dr-weller/conference-on-the-hcch-2019-judgments-convention-on-13-and-14-september-2021/. You will receive an invitation for registration in due time. A registration fee of € 100.- will be asked for participating.
Uruguay: General Law of Private International Law Project about to be passed into Law
The new Uruguayan General Law of Private International Law has passed the Senate and will now be submitted to the House of Representatives. (The hearing in the Senate can be watched here, starting at 2:14:40.) This means that a project that was initiated in 1994 by Didier Opertti Badán will finally come to fruition. ASADIP’s blog provides a note by Cecilia Fresnedo that lays out, in Spanish, the arduous path that the project took between 1994 and now. It is also possible to download the draft legislation. Another brief note by Claudia Madrid Martínez is on the excellent blog cartas blogatorias.
Despite its small size, Uruguay has long been one of the leaders of private international law in Latin America, and has been highly regarded worldwide. Cecilia Fresnedo reported on the project last year at a conference on the role of academia in Latin American private international law at the Max Planck Institute; she has written on Uruguayan Private International Law – Past and Future in the Festschrift for Herbert Kronke that came out earlier this year. The 2016 draft of the law is here; an appreciation by José Antonio Tomás Ortíz de la Torre is here.
Child Abduction Convention case and national procedural provisions determining who can be a party to the proceedings – currently under scrutiny in Poland
Is a national procedural provision determining who can act as a party to the proceedings capable of temporarily preventing the return of a child ordered within the framework of the HCCH 1980 Child Abduction Convention? This question has been recently answered in the affirmative, as illustrated by the recent developments in a case being currently under scrutiny of both the Polish Constitutional and Supreme Courts.