Book Chapter
Details
Citation
Beaumont P & Yekini A (2022) Pragmatism and Private °®Âþµº Law. In: Beaumont P & Holliday J (eds.) A Guide to Global Private °®Âþµº Law. First ed. Hart Studies in Private °®Âþµº Law, Vol 32. Oxford: Hart Publishing, pp. 17-30. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781509932085
Abstract
Private international law is the branch of law that seeks to resolve conflicts arising from cross-border relationships and the potential application of conflicting normative systems to a given case. Scholars differ on the objectives of private international law and the methods for resolving conflictual problems.[2]
This chapter presents a pragmatic theory of private international law for the development of the subject globally, primarily by the Hague Conference on Private °®Âþµº Law (HCCH). It builds on earlier work by Kegel[3] and by Beaumont and McEleavy[4] that outlined the importance of the discipline¡¯s ability to separate conflicts justice from substantive justice (the latter being protected where necessary by exceptions ¨C public policy and overriding mandatory rules ¨C to the normal, objective conflicts justice rules).[5] The pragmatic approach emphasises the empirical study of the effectiveness of a variety of private international law solutions and of the underlying substantive law differences in order to design the best private international law solutions. This chapter makes a new contribution to the theory of pragmatism of private international law. First, it goes back to the work of the founders of pragmatism as an intellectual idea,[6] sets out some pragmatic goals for global private international law, and then develops the pragmatic method for global private international law relying on multilateralism, comparativism and empiricism.
Keywords
Private °®Âþµº Law; theory; pragmatism; HCCH
| Status | Published |
|---|---|
| Title of series | Hart Studies in Private °®Âþµº Law |
| Number in series | Vol 32 |
| Publication date | 31/12/2022 |
| Publication date online | 31/05/2022 |
| Publisher | Hart Publishing |
| Place of publication | Oxford |
| ISSN of series | 2634-5064 |
| ISBN | 978-1-50993-207-8 |
| eISBN | 978-1-50993-208-5 |
People (1)
Professor of Private °®Âþµº Law, Law