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Corporations and the Privilege Against Self-incrimination / Stijn LAMBERIGTS
Titre : Corporations and the Privilege Against Self-incrimination Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Stijn LAMBERIGTS, Auteur Mention d'édition : 1ère édition Editeur : Hart Publishing Année de publication : 2022 Collection : Hart Studies in European Criminal Law num. 18 Importance : 304 pages Format : Relié ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-5099-5331-8 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Droit des entreprise en difficulté et droit des sociétés Mots-clés : corporations self-incrimination procedural safeguards corporate personhood rationales protection evidence waiver sociétés auto-incrimination droit pénal Index. décimale : 000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue Résumé : This book asks whether the well-established privilege against self-incrimination applies to corporations, whether it should, and if so, to what extent. Those questions have an increasingly important EU criminal law dimension. To answer them, this study draws on comparative insights from Belgium, England and Wales, and the US; as well as case law of the ECtHR and EU Law. It covers the established CJEU case law in competition cases, the recent CJEU ruling in DB v Consob and addresses Directive (EU) 2016/343. It will appeal to scholars of EU criminal law, but also to white-collar and competition practitioners. Corporations and the Privilege Against Self-incrimination [texte imprimé] / Stijn LAMBERIGTS, Auteur . - 1ère édition . - Hart Publishing, 2022 . - 304 pages ; Relié . - (Hart Studies in European Criminal Law; 18) .
ISBN : 978-1-5099-5331-8
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Droit des entreprise en difficulté et droit des sociétés Mots-clés : corporations self-incrimination procedural safeguards corporate personhood rationales protection evidence waiver sociétés auto-incrimination droit pénal Index. décimale : 000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue Résumé : This book asks whether the well-established privilege against self-incrimination applies to corporations, whether it should, and if so, to what extent. Those questions have an increasingly important EU criminal law dimension. To answer them, this study draws on comparative insights from Belgium, England and Wales, and the US; as well as case law of the ECtHR and EU Law. It covers the established CJEU case law in competition cases, the recent CJEU ruling in DB v Consob and addresses Directive (EU) 2016/343. It will appeal to scholars of EU criminal law, but also to white-collar and competition practitioners. Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 2537 X 2022 LAM Livre CREDIMI 301 X - Droit des entreprise en difficulté et droit des sociétés Disponible Evidentiary Privileges in International Arbitration / Nicolas GRÉGOIRE
Titre : Evidentiary Privileges in International Arbitration Titre original : A Comparative Analysis under English, American, Swiss and French law Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Nicolas GRÉGOIRE, Auteur Editeur : LGDJ Lextenso Année de publication : 2016 Autre Editeur : Schulthess Collection : Collection Genevoise Importance : 236 pages Format : Broché ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-3-7255-8584-7 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Règlement des différends Mots-clés : evidentiary privileges international arbitration comparative analysis Grande-Bretagne États-Unis Suisse France evidence privileges nature rationale forms of objections arbitrations rules attorney-client privilege work product doctrine joint interest privilege common interest privilege self-incrimination mediationstate secrets patent agent accoutant trade secrets characterization applicable law transational rules practical considerations Index. décimale : 000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue Résumé : Global markets offer a multitude of business opportunities and, as a consequence, cross-border activities and international trade have become the norm. The shift towards multi-jurisdictional business transactions has resulted in an increase in international disputes. Rules of evidence, on the other hand, including evidentiary privileges, have been conceived for proceedings in local courts and are not adjusted to international disputes submitted to arbitration. In addition, arbitration laws and arbitration rules do not provide any guidance on how arbitral tribunals should deal with evidentiary privileges, although rules of evidentiary privilege can vary considerably throughout the world. For example, common law jurisdictions, which generally provide for extensive disclosure, will usually contain highly developed and varied evidentiary privilege rules, while civil law jurisdictions, where disclosure is limited, will afford less protection to evidentiary privileges. The purpose of this book is to review the evidentiary privileges existing under English, American, Swiss and French law that are the most likely to be invoked in arbitration, to determine which laws govern evidentiary privileges in international arbitration and, finally, to determine whether there exists a preponderance of practice suggesting that certain evidentiary privileges could develop into transnational rules in international arbitration. Evidentiary Privileges in International Arbitration = A Comparative Analysis under English, American, Swiss and French law [texte imprimé] / Nicolas GRÉGOIRE, Auteur . - LGDJ Lextenso : Schulthess, 2016 . - 236 pages ; Broché. - (Collection Genevoise) .
ISBN : 978-3-7255-8584-7
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Règlement des différends Mots-clés : evidentiary privileges international arbitration comparative analysis Grande-Bretagne États-Unis Suisse France evidence privileges nature rationale forms of objections arbitrations rules attorney-client privilege work product doctrine joint interest privilege common interest privilege self-incrimination mediationstate secrets patent agent accoutant trade secrets characterization applicable law transational rules practical considerations Index. décimale : 000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue Résumé : Global markets offer a multitude of business opportunities and, as a consequence, cross-border activities and international trade have become the norm. The shift towards multi-jurisdictional business transactions has resulted in an increase in international disputes. Rules of evidence, on the other hand, including evidentiary privileges, have been conceived for proceedings in local courts and are not adjusted to international disputes submitted to arbitration. In addition, arbitration laws and arbitration rules do not provide any guidance on how arbitral tribunals should deal with evidentiary privileges, although rules of evidentiary privilege can vary considerably throughout the world. For example, common law jurisdictions, which generally provide for extensive disclosure, will usually contain highly developed and varied evidentiary privilege rules, while civil law jurisdictions, where disclosure is limited, will afford less protection to evidentiary privileges. The purpose of this book is to review the evidentiary privileges existing under English, American, Swiss and French law that are the most likely to be invoked in arbitration, to determine which laws govern evidentiary privileges in international arbitration and, finally, to determine whether there exists a preponderance of practice suggesting that certain evidentiary privileges could develop into transnational rules in international arbitration. Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 2064 XVII 2016 GRE Livre CREDIMI 301 XVII - Règlement des différends (arbitrage commercial, ouvrages généraux, MARD) Disponible