PART I: INTRODUCTION
1: Definition, nature and scope of private international law
2: Historical development and current theories
PART II: PRELIMINARY TOPICS
3: Classification
4: The incidental question
5: Renvoi
6: Substance and procedure
7: The proof of foreign law
8: Exclusion of foreign law
9: Domicil, nationality and residence
PART III: JURISDICTION, FOREIGN JUDGMENTS AND AWARDS
10: Jurisdiction of the English courts - an introduction
11: Jurisdiction under the Brussels and Lugano Conventions
12: The competence of the English courts under the traditional
rules
13: Stays of English proceedings and restraining foreign
proceedings
14: Limitations on jurisdiction
15: Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments: the
traditional rules
16: Recognition and enforcement of judgments under the Brussels and
Lugano Conventions
17: Foreign arbitral awards
PART IV: THE LAW OF OBLIGATIONS
18: Contracts
19: Non-contractual obligations
PART V: FAMILY LAW
20: Marriage
21: Matrimonal causes
22: Declarations
23: Financial relief
24: Children
25: Legitimacy, legitimation and adoption
26: Mental disorder
PART VI: THE LAW OF PROPERTY
27: The distinction between movables and immovables
28: Immovables
29: The transfer of tangible movables
30: The assignment of intangible movables
31: Administration of estates
32: Succession
33: Matrimonial property
34: Trusts
Index
James Fawcett read law at the University of Nottingham and
qualified as a solicitor at a leading City of London firm. He
became a lecturer at Bristol University in 1973, obtained a Ph.D.
in 1980 and, after a year at the National University of Singapore,
became a Professor at the University of Leicester in 1988. He
became Professor of International Commercial Law at Nottingham in
1995. His major teaching and research interest is in private
international law,
especially the commercial aspects thereof. He is the co-author of
one of the leading textbooks in the area, Cheshire and North's
Private International Law (13 ed., 1999). He has been a Director of
Studies and
Professor at the Hague Academy of International Law.
Janeen Carruthers joined the School of Law in 1999 as a Lecturer in
Private Law, having previously worked as a Solicitor in private
practice with Maclay, Murray & Spens, Solicitors. She graduated
from the University of Glasgow LL.B. (Hons) (1994), Dip.L.P.
(1995), and following a period of part-time study, Ph.D. (2002).
Her doctoral research is in the field of International Private Law,
under the title, Beyond the Ineluctable: An Examination of Choice
of Law Rules in Property.
In 2006, Dr Carruthers was appointed to a Readership in the
Conflict of Laws, and her research interests now lie in all areas
of International Private Law.
Sir Peter North CBE QC was a Law Commissioner for England and Wales
from 1976-1984 and was Principal of Jesus College, Oxford, from
1984-2005 and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University from 1993-1997.
He is also a fellow of the British Academy, a Member of the
Institute of International Law, a QC (Honoris Causa) and an
Honorary Bencher of the Inner Temple.
`The work is a treasure trove for the dilligent student, and given
the level of detail and analysis which it contains, the paperback
edition is very attractvely priced'
Kirsty J Hood, Edinburgh Law Journal
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