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Law & governance-beyond the public-private law divide? /

The Third Annual Conference of the Netherlands Institute for Law and Governance took place at Wageningen University on November 29, 2011. The conference was themed ""Law & Governance - Beyond the Public-Private Law Divide?"". A governance approach focuses on all institutions...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Colombi Ciacchi, A. L. B. (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Hague, Netherlands : Eleven International Publishing, 2013.
Colección:Governance & recht ; 9.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • COVER; TITLE PAGE; Foreword; Table of Contents; Part 1. Public & Private Law; Governance and the Public-Private Law Divide in the Netherlands; 1. Introduction; 2. The Traditional View on the Public-Private Law Divide; 2.1 The General Law Doctrine; 2.2 The Mixed Law Doctrine; 3. Another View on the Public-Private Law Divide; 3.1 Introduction to the Modern Views; 3.2. The Common Law Doctrine; 3.3 The Fill-in Law Doctrine; 4. Explanatory Factors; 5. From Macro Level to Meso Level: the Governance-Sectors; 5.1 The Multi-Layered Legal Structure of a Governance-Sector.
  • 5.2 The Public-Private Law Divide in a Governance-Sector6. Summary and Conclusions; The Hybrid Notary in a Split between Office and Enterprise; 1. Introduction; 2. The Notary as a Civil Servant and an Entrepreneur; 3. The Notary in the Market; 3.1. Position of the Notary in Legal Transactions; 3.2. The Choice of the Notary as Seen by the Client: Lack of Transparency; 3.3. Dependence on Suppliers: Return Commission; 3.4. Consequences of Market Forces; 3.5. Market Forces and Deregulation are Mutually Exclusive: Who Will Sweep the Notarial Court Clean?
  • 3.6. More Exposure to Market Forces: The Economic Perspective4. Further Introduction of the Free Market is Accompanied by More Regulations; 5. The Position of the Royal Netherlands Notarial Organisation: Should it Promote Members' Interests?; 5.1. From a Private Law Association to a Public Order: The Difficult Relationship with the Members; 5.2. The Principle of Legality and Representation: The Difference between the NOvA and the KNB; 5.3. Restrictions on Powers of Regulation; 5.4. European Dimension; 6. Concluding Remarks.
  • Selznick on Governance Revisited, What Can We Learn from Early Legal Sociology?Introduction; 1. Government or Governance; 2. Selznick on Organizations; 2.1 Government and Management; 2.2 Private government; 2.3 Private Government and the Rule of Law; 2.4 Legal Change; 3. Dutch New Governance Regimes; 3.1 Supervisory Governance; 3.2 The Social Housing Sector; 3.3 The New Housing Corporation Act; 3.4 Analysis; 3.5 Governance in Dutch Law; 4. Selznick revisited; 4.1 The reduction of power; 4.2 Supervisory Governance; Part 2. Law & Regulation.
  • Competition Law and Private-SectorSustainability Initiatives1. Introduction; 2. Defining Sustainability; 3. The Problem of European Competition Law and a Sustainable Society; 3.1. A Concise Introduction to Competition Law in the Context of this Essay; 3.2. Private Responsibility for Public Policy Goals and Competition Law; 3.3. A Clash of Values; 3.4 Great, but is there really a Problem?; 4. Solutions; 4.1. A Changing Interpretation of Competition Law: Balance is Everything; 4.2. Legislation outside Competition Law; 4.3. Who Gets to Decide?; 5. The Road Forward.