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Regulatory Competition in Civil Procedure Between EU Member States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2019

Stéphanie Francq
Affiliation:
Professor at UCLouvain
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Addressing the question of regulatory competition in civil procedure among the Member States at the time when the Brussels Convention is turning 50 might seem like raising an inexistent problem at the wrong time. First, how could Member States engage in regulatory competition at the civil procedure level when international jurisdiction, parallel procedures, jurisdiction clauses and recognition and enforcement issues are regulated by common rules inherited from the charming grandmother celebrated in this book (i.e. the Brussels Convention, mother of Regulation Brussels I and later grandmother of the Recast, without counting other off spring like Brussels IIa, etc.)? Second, why would Member States engage in regulatory competition, especially at the civil procedure level, in order to attract more litigation to their own courts? Do they really wish to increase the overload of their national courts? These two sensible questions tend to doubt the reality of regulatory competition. And indeed they also raise a more fundamental question: is justice or civil procedure an object that can be submitted to regulatory or normative competition at all?

A few statements collected here and there in policy declarations or in academia tend rather to show that regulatory competition at the civil procedure level is raging.

  • – ‘Today, justice has become an instrument to boost economic growth and employment.’

  • – ‘The judicial apparatus is not only destined to defend a citizen's fundamental rights and our society. It may as well provide a catalyst for our companies and by extension, our economy … The setting up of the BIBC has to be viewed in this context. This court will foster Brussels attractiveness for companies and investors (…).’

  • – ‘Effective courts are important for sustained economic development … An obvious implication is that countries with underperforming courts should reform them … There is however another approach to dealing with a dysfunctional court system – one that can go hand in hand with domestic judicial reform. The law can enable litigants from countries with ineffective judicial systems to have their cases adjudicated in the courts of other nations that have better-functioning judicial systems.’

  • Type
    Chapter
    Information
    European Private International Law at 50
    Celebrating and Contemplating the 1968 Brussels Convention and its Successors
    , pp. 13 - 32
    Publisher: Intersentia
    Print publication year: 2018

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