The article explores the existence, nature and impact of the market for `legal products', and in particular the role of non state actors such as multinational enterprises (MNEs) and international economic organisations (IEOs) in that market. It considers IEOs as producers of legal reform models; states as consumers of legal reform models and producers of resulting legal systems; and MNEs as consumers of resulting legal systems. It argues that the market for legal reform products is oligopolistic, and thus not fully competitive;that competition does currently exist in the market for legal systems, due to the large number of state producers; but that such competition as exists is likely to fall as legal systems are forced to converge under th...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Essay discusses how comparative law played and plays a role in the statutory development of cor...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
From the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, society has experienced the persistent tendency of ...
In many regions of the world and across various fields, law has become a product. Individuals and co...
This article examines how the globalization of economic markets, and attendant changes in internatio...
In this article we criticize the so-called more economic approach to European competition law for di...
Economic globalization has created a governance gap, often leaving powerful corporations largely unr...
Discussions of the competition law treatment of dominant firms often center on the issue of whether ...
In the following Article, Dr. Hadari first analyzes the traditional Continental and Anglo-American c...
Despite the economic importance of multinational enterprises ( MNEs ), there is a surprising paucity...
The main tools for the convergence of company law are full legal unification, mere harmonisation, an...
The problem of harmonizing legal rules across multiple overlapping legal orders is, in part, a probl...
The Article argues that courts confronting the effects of multinational enterprise insolvency must u...
In the last two decades, the economy has undergone fundamental transformation with the twin structur...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Essay discusses how comparative law played and plays a role in the statutory development of cor...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
From the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, society has experienced the persistent tendency of ...
In many regions of the world and across various fields, law has become a product. Individuals and co...
This article examines how the globalization of economic markets, and attendant changes in internatio...
In this article we criticize the so-called more economic approach to European competition law for di...
Economic globalization has created a governance gap, often leaving powerful corporations largely unr...
Discussions of the competition law treatment of dominant firms often center on the issue of whether ...
In the following Article, Dr. Hadari first analyzes the traditional Continental and Anglo-American c...
Despite the economic importance of multinational enterprises ( MNEs ), there is a surprising paucity...
The main tools for the convergence of company law are full legal unification, mere harmonisation, an...
The problem of harmonizing legal rules across multiple overlapping legal orders is, in part, a probl...
The Article argues that courts confronting the effects of multinational enterprise insolvency must u...
In the last two decades, the economy has undergone fundamental transformation with the twin structur...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Essay discusses how comparative law played and plays a role in the statutory development of cor...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...