Although the CISG has been in force more than 25 years, it does not have a uniform solution to the ‘battle of the forms’. The courts have had to resolve these battles using the general rules and principles of the Convention. An analysis of CISG case law reveals that German courts and US courts approach the battle of the forms problem differently and, consequently, produce different outcomes. This article analyzes and compares the possible solutions to the battle of the forms. Based on this analysis of CISG case law, it is submitted that the (more) correct interpretation of the CISG rules will lead to the last-shot solution. 
In the realm of commercial trade, it is a common practice that sellers and buyers manifest their in...
Despite being in effect for over thirty years, a debate continues on whether the United Nations Conv...
As trade between the United States and Canada continues to increase on the heels of the free trade a...
The Note argues that courts deciding a case involving a battle of the forms should refer to the gene...
This article analyzes the treatment of CISG Article 79 by the German courts. Indeed, as one of the m...
This paper considers the relation of the Hague Principles on Choice of Law in International Commerci...
Ours is not an age of nuance. Simple and certain answers are the preferred course, the more so for c...
The UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (“CISG”)1 has played a preeminent...
This article aims to present the consequences of a State's declaration to opt-out from the freedom o...
This article analyzes the treatment of CISG Article 79 by the German courts. Indeed, as one of the m...
This paper focuses on one type of ex-ante effect of the battle of the forms: the incentive to draft ...
The debate on whether a satisfactory degree of uniformity in the interpretation of the UN Convention...
Recently, there have been significant legislative changes in the Nordic rules concerning formation o...
The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, 1980 (CISG) 1 is the...
The Note argues that courts deciding a case involving a battle of the forms should refer to the gene...
In the realm of commercial trade, it is a common practice that sellers and buyers manifest their in...
Despite being in effect for over thirty years, a debate continues on whether the United Nations Conv...
As trade between the United States and Canada continues to increase on the heels of the free trade a...
The Note argues that courts deciding a case involving a battle of the forms should refer to the gene...
This article analyzes the treatment of CISG Article 79 by the German courts. Indeed, as one of the m...
This paper considers the relation of the Hague Principles on Choice of Law in International Commerci...
Ours is not an age of nuance. Simple and certain answers are the preferred course, the more so for c...
The UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (“CISG”)1 has played a preeminent...
This article aims to present the consequences of a State's declaration to opt-out from the freedom o...
This article analyzes the treatment of CISG Article 79 by the German courts. Indeed, as one of the m...
This paper focuses on one type of ex-ante effect of the battle of the forms: the incentive to draft ...
The debate on whether a satisfactory degree of uniformity in the interpretation of the UN Convention...
Recently, there have been significant legislative changes in the Nordic rules concerning formation o...
The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, 1980 (CISG) 1 is the...
The Note argues that courts deciding a case involving a battle of the forms should refer to the gene...
In the realm of commercial trade, it is a common practice that sellers and buyers manifest their in...
Despite being in effect for over thirty years, a debate continues on whether the United Nations Conv...
As trade between the United States and Canada continues to increase on the heels of the free trade a...