New Civil Codes in Hungary and Romania /

This edited volume examines two recent Central European recodifications of civil law. The contributors present and discuss the regulation and the fundamental changes related to the new Civil Codes in each country. They also highlight the novelties and some of the issues of great debate of the new re...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: SpringerLink (Online service)
Group Author: Menyh rd, Attila (Editor); Veress, Em d (Editor)
Published: Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
Publisher Address: Cham :
Publication Dates: 2017.
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice, 63
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63327-5
Summary: This edited volume examines two recent Central European recodifications of civil law. The contributors present and discuss the regulation and the fundamental changes related to the new Civil Codes in each country. They also highlight the novelties and some of the issues of great debate of the new regulation. The papers investigate specific parts of the two Civil Codes. Coverage reviews default rules of legal persons and companies, key issues of the new regulations of property law, and the topic of intellectual property. The contributors also consider the law of obligation, unforeseeable changes in circumstances in contracts, family law and law of succession, and more. Hungary and Romania connect to each other by their special historical and cultural background, which serves as a solid basis of great cooperation. This volume shows how the two countries view civil law. It offers readers straightforward and practice-oriented knowledge on the subject.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource (IX, 205 pages).
ISBN: 9783319633275
Index Number: K7000
CLC: D997
Contents: Foreword (Attila Menyh rd) -- Chapter 1. Legal Persons in the New Civil Code of Hungary (Zolt n Csehi) -- Chapter 2. Default Rules on Companies in the New Hungarian Civil Code (Andr s Kisfaludi) -- Chapter 3. The New Romanian Civil Code - Difficulties in the Transition Towards a Monist Private Law (Em d Veress) -- Chapter 4. The Persistence of Some Characteristics of Commercial Law in the Monist Romanian Civil Law (Zsolt Fegyveresi) -- Chapter 5. Property law in the New Hungarian Civil Code: Key Issues (Attila Menyh rd) -- Chapter 6. Property Law in the New Romanian Civil Code (Szil rd Sztranyiczki) -- Chapter 7. Intellectual Property in the New Civil Code of Hungary (G bor Faludi) -- Chapter 8. The New Civil Code in Romania and its Impact on Intellectual Property (Ligia C tuna) -- Chapter 9. Some Structural Questions on the Relationship of Contractual and Extracontractual Liability in the New Hungarian Civil Code ( d m Fuglinszky) -- Chapter 10. New Particular Agreements in the New Hungarian Civil Code (Bal zs T key) -- Chapter 11. Unforeseeable Changes in Circumstances in Contracts in the New Romanian Civil Code (Johanna Szekr nyes) -- Chapter 12. Perceptions of Simulated Contracts in the Hungarian and Romanian Legal Systems (Krisztina Constantinescu) -- Chapter 13. Marriage and Cohabitation in the New Hungarian Civil Code Answering the New Challenges (Orsolya Szeibert) -- Chapter 14. The Law of Succession in the New Hungarian Civil Code (Hella Moln r) -- Chapter 15. Law of Succession in the New Romanian Civil Code (J nos Sz kely).