ISBN-13: 9781509913824 / Angielski / Miękka / 2017 / 196 str.
ISBN-13: 9781509913824 / Angielski / Miękka / 2017 / 196 str.
Now available in paperback The European codification project has rapidly gathered pace since the turn of the century. This monograph considers the codification project in light of a series of broader analytical frameworks-comparative, historical, and constitutional-which make modern codification phenomena intelligible. This new reading across fields renders the European codification project (currently being promoted through the Common Frame of Reference and the Optional Sales Law Code proposal) vulnerable to constitutionally-grounded criticism, traceable to normative considerations of private law authority and legitimacy. Arguing that modern codification phenomena are more complex than positivist, socio-legal, and historical approaches have suggested over the past two centuries, the book stages a pathbreaking method of analysis of the law-discourse (nomos-centered) which questions at once the reduction of private law to legislation and of law to power. On this basis, it redefines the ways in which to counter law's disintegration and crisis in the context of Europeanisation. Professor Niglia reconstructs the European codification project as a complex structure of government-in-the-making that embodies a set of contingent world views, excludes alternatives, challenges the plurality of private laws, and entrenches conflicts that pertain, not only to form (codification, de-codification, recodification), but also to dilemmas implicated in determining the substantive orientation of European private law. The book investigates the position of the codifiers and their discontents in the shadow of the codification strategy pursued by the European Commission, noting a new turn in the struggle over the configuration of private law which has taken place since the Savigny-Thibaut dispute of 1814 which this book critically revisits exactly two centuries later. (Series: Modern Studies in European Law) Subject: European Law, Private Law, Comparative Law]