Regulating the internet through private international law

<p>This thesis discusses how private international law can effectively address challenges raised by the internet for different areas of private law, linking this question to the broader debate about the potential of private international law to resolve conflicts of regulatory authority in a gl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lutzi, T
Other Authors: Dickinson, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
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author Lutzi, T
author2 Dickinson, A
author_facet Dickinson, A
Lutzi, T
author_sort Lutzi, T
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis discusses how private international law can effectively address challenges raised by the internet for different areas of private law, linking this question to the broader debate about the potential of private international law to resolve conflicts of regulatory authority in a globalised world.</p> <br> <p>The thesis identifies two core challenges of the internet: its independence from state borders, which drastically increases the number of connections to different countries in internet cases but reduces their usefulness; and the prevalence of private ordering, especially on online platforms that are effectively regulated only by their hosts.</p> <br> <p>Using EU private international law as an example, it argues that existing approaches to internet cases are often dominated by a deep-rooted fear of leaving claimants underprotected from the perceived dangers of an unregulated internet; thus, instead of reducing the overwhelming number of connections created by internet communication to few, particularly useful ones that allow to effectively allocate adjudicatory and prescriptive jurisdiction, they attach significance to all of them, allowing claimants to chose from a large of number of fora and applicable laws. This creates complex mosaics of jurisdiction and problematic overlaps of national laws, exposing defendants to a risk of worldwide liability.</p> <br> <p>This thesis proposes an alternative approach that arguably creates a better balance between the parties’ interests and expectations, combining a country-of-origin default rule with a targeting-based exception for consumer cases. It shows how such an approach could be implemented within the existing framework of EU private international law but would be difficult to extend beyond the relatively harmonised internal market of the EU. It argues that this approach would not only better exploit the potential of private international law for the horizontal coordination between national courts and legal systems but could also facilitate the vertical coordination between public regulators and private parties.</p> <br> <p>It thus provides an example for how private international law can accommodate new challenges without abandoning its commitment to ‘conflicts’ justice and substantive neutrality.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:0be19cf2-070b-41d4-9718-417f00b510d52024-12-01T11:43:47ZRegulating the internet through private international lawThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:0be19cf2-070b-41d4-9718-417f00b510d5Private international lawInternet lawConflict of lawsEU lawEnglishORA Deposit2018Lutzi, TDickinson, A<p>This thesis discusses how private international law can effectively address challenges raised by the internet for different areas of private law, linking this question to the broader debate about the potential of private international law to resolve conflicts of regulatory authority in a globalised world.</p> <br> <p>The thesis identifies two core challenges of the internet: its independence from state borders, which drastically increases the number of connections to different countries in internet cases but reduces their usefulness; and the prevalence of private ordering, especially on online platforms that are effectively regulated only by their hosts.</p> <br> <p>Using EU private international law as an example, it argues that existing approaches to internet cases are often dominated by a deep-rooted fear of leaving claimants underprotected from the perceived dangers of an unregulated internet; thus, instead of reducing the overwhelming number of connections created by internet communication to few, particularly useful ones that allow to effectively allocate adjudicatory and prescriptive jurisdiction, they attach significance to all of them, allowing claimants to chose from a large of number of fora and applicable laws. This creates complex mosaics of jurisdiction and problematic overlaps of national laws, exposing defendants to a risk of worldwide liability.</p> <br> <p>This thesis proposes an alternative approach that arguably creates a better balance between the parties’ interests and expectations, combining a country-of-origin default rule with a targeting-based exception for consumer cases. It shows how such an approach could be implemented within the existing framework of EU private international law but would be difficult to extend beyond the relatively harmonised internal market of the EU. It argues that this approach would not only better exploit the potential of private international law for the horizontal coordination between national courts and legal systems but could also facilitate the vertical coordination between public regulators and private parties.</p> <br> <p>It thus provides an example for how private international law can accommodate new challenges without abandoning its commitment to ‘conflicts’ justice and substantive neutrality.</p>
spellingShingle Private international law
Internet law
Conflict of laws
EU law
Lutzi, T
Regulating the internet through private international law
title Regulating the internet through private international law
title_full Regulating the internet through private international law
title_fullStr Regulating the internet through private international law
title_full_unstemmed Regulating the internet through private international law
title_short Regulating the internet through private international law
title_sort regulating the internet through private international law
topic Private international law
Internet law
Conflict of laws
EU law
work_keys_str_mv AT lutzit regulatingtheinternetthroughprivateinternationallaw