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Prologue.- Foreign Administrative Acts: General Report; Jaime Rodríguez-Arana Muñoz, Marta García Pérez, Juan José Pernas García and Carlos Aymerich Cano.- The Eu's Role in the Progress towards the Recognition and Execution of Foreign Administrative Acts: The Principle of Mutual Recognition and the Transnational Nature of Certain Administrative Acts; Juan José Pernas García.- The Incorporation of the Acts of the Andean Community Of Nations Into Internal Legal Systems; Libardo Rodríguez Rodríguez and Jorge Enrique Santos Rodríguez.- Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts in Australia; Justice John Griffiths.- Foreign Administrative Acts in Brazil; Romeu Felipe Bacellar Filho and Tatyana Scheila Friedrich.- Foreign Administrative Acts: The Case of Estonia; Vallo Olle and Triinu Rauk.- La Reconnaissance Des Actes Administratifs Étrangers Au Droit Français; M. Timothée Paris.- The Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts A German Perspective; Ulrich Stelkens and Michael Mirschberger.- On The Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts in Greece; Alexandra E. Douga.- La Reconnaissance Des Actes Administratifs Étrangers En Hongrie; István Balász, Marianna Nagy et Krisztina Rozsnay and Ëotvos Loránd.- From The Recognition of Foreign Acts to Trans-National Administrative Procedures; Giacinto della Cananea.- Notion and Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts in Poland; Zbigniew Kmieciak, Przemysaw Florjanowicz-Bachut and Robert Siuciski.- Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts In Portugal; Dulce Lopes.- Searching for Foreign Administrative Acts in Spanish Law; Carlos Aymerich Cano.- The Recognition of Foreign Administrative Decisions in Sweden; Henrik Wenander.- The Recognition of Foreign Administrative Acts in Switzerland;Myriam Senn.- Les Actes Administratifs Étrangers Et Le Droit Turc; Çala TANSU.- Recognition Of Foreign Administrative Acts In The United States; John C. Reitz.
Provides a complete view of the issue, analysing it from international, European and national perspectives Highlights the current shortcoming in national law and the need to move forward Discusses a relevant topic in view of economic globalisation and European integration
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I. The Impact of Corruption on International Commercial Contracts General Report; Michael Joachim Bonell and Olaf Meyer.- II. New Wine in Old Bottles: Corrupt Foreign Contracts in Canadian Private Law; Joshua Karton and Jenna-Dawn Shervill.- III. Balancing Public Interest with Transactional Security: The Validity of Contracts Tainted with Corruption under Chinese Law; Qiao Liu and Xiang Ren.- IV. Consequences of Corrupt Practices in Business Transactions (Including International) in Terms of Czech Law; Jií Valdhans.- V. The Civil Law Consequences of Corruption According to the Laws of the Least Corrupt Country in the World Denmark; Peter Damsholt Langsted and Lars Bo Langsted.- VI. English Judges: Little Mice in the Big Business of Corruption?; Yseult Marique.- VII. Still Some Unclarity Regarding the Legal Consequences Arising from the Nullity of Agreements through Corruption Estonia; Marko Kairjak.- VIII. Who Gets the Bribe? The German Perspective on Civil Law Consequences of Corruption in International Contracts; Matthias Weller.- IX. The Effects of Corruption on Contracts in Italy: The Long Road towards a Legal and Fair, Competitive Market; Paola Mariani.- X. Contracts Tainted by Corruption: Does Dutch Civil Law Augment the Criminalization of Corruption?; Abiola Makinwa and Xandra Kramer.- XI. Civil Law Forfeiture as Means to Restrict the Application of the in pari delicto-Principle and Other Private Law Consequences of Corruption under Polish Law; Maksymilian Pazdan and Maciej Zachariasiewicz.- XII. Corruption in International Commercial Contracts A Portuguese Substantive and Private International Law Perspective; Luís de Lima Pinheiro.- XIII. Russian Experience and Practice on Civil Law Consequences of Corruption; Sergey Usoskin.- XIV. For a Few Dollars More Corruption in Singapore; Michael Furmston.- XV. The Civil Law Consequences of Corruption under South African Law; Tjakie Naudé.- XVI. Impact ofBribery on Contracts under Swiss Civil Law; Christa Kissling.- XVII. The Civil Law Consequences of Corruption under the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts: an Analysis in Light of International Arbitration Practice; Richard Kreindler and Francesca Gesualdi.- XVIII. The United States' Multidimensional Approach to Combatting Corruption; Padideh Ala'i.- XIX. Fighting Corruption from the Civil Side: Echoes from the Silence of Venezuelan Contract Law; Eugenio Hernández-Bretón and Claudia Madrid Martínez.
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