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Enlightened Decision Making

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2019

Extract

One distinctive feature of comparative law is the ongoing inquiry into the social usefulness of the discipline and the almost constant redefinition of the very object of its (scientific) research. Since the Paris Congress of 1900, comparative law seems to have inspired a vague sense of guilt in those who study it. No other legal discipline exhibits such a strong desire to justify its existence, with the possible exception of Roman Law.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2002 by the International Association of Law Libraries 

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References

1 See generally Gordley, James, “Is Comparative Law a Distinct Discipline?,” Am. J. Comp. L. 46 (1998): 607 (arguing that the law of different legal systems may in fact be the same).Google Scholar

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32 The revival of the Societas Europea (SE) is unlikely to modify this assessment. The SE has a very limited scope in its application; its conception is almost thirty years old, and it hardly accommodates the needs of modern business organization and financing.Google Scholar

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38 [What is not said in English does not exist in the world.] This is a paraphrase of the Latin phrase, often used in European evidence: “Quod non est in actis non est in mundo.” [What is not in the files does not exist in the world.] (author's translation).Google Scholar

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42 Modern arbitration statutes allow the arbitrators to apply the choice-of-law rules they consider applicable or simply to apply the rules they consider best suited. See, e.g., UNCITRAL Model Law on Int'l Commercial Arbitration art. 28(2) (1985); Swiss Code of Private International Law (CPIL) art. 187 (1987). The same is true for French, Dutch, and to a lesser extent, German law, although the revised German Code of Civil Procedure did not implement article 28 of the Model Law, but rather changed the rule to one which compels arbitrators to apply the law with which the dispute has the closest connection.Google Scholar

43 New developments show that the control of the award by the judiciary of the forum state may, in exceptional cases, not be conclusive anymore; in some instances, the invalidation of the award in that jurisdiction would not be an obstacle for its enforcement in other states. See Gaillard, Édouard, “L'exécution des sentences annulées dans leur pays d'origine,” Journal du droit international 125 (1998): 645. The author cautions, nevertheless, against a “présentation outrancière de la thèse internationaliste” and emphasizes that these developments only mean that the binding effect of the award is not solely in the discretion of the forum state anymore, but of all the legal orders recognizing “cet acte privé qu'est la sentence.” Id. at 673–74.Google Scholar

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46 See id. Google Scholar

47 See Glenn, H. Patrick, “Comparative Law and Legal Practice: On Removing the Borders,” Tul. L. Rev. 75 (2001): 977.Google Scholar

48 Palmer, Vernon V., “Insularity and Leadership in American Comparative Law,” Tul. L. Rev. 75 (2001): 1093.Google Scholar

49 Being aware of differences creates a sense of our historical contingency. See Curran, Vivian Grosswald, “Dealing in Difference: Comparative Law's Potential for Broadening Legal Perspectives,” Am. J. Comp. L. 46 (1998): 657 (arguing that comparison can lead to understanding); Fletcher, George P., “Comparative Law as a Subversive Discipline,” Am. J. Comp. L. 46 (1998): 683 (arguing that comparative law may help me understand the struggle between the forces of establishment and subversion).Google Scholar