Product Overview
Cross-border insolvency rules of all kinds (e.g. European Insolvency Regulation, UNCITRAL Model Law, ALI Principles for the NAFTA States, national laws such as Chapter 15 US Bankruptcy Code or Sch. 1 Cross-Border Insolvency Regulation 2006) are founded on, and can be traced back to, basic values that aim to pursue and enforce such standards. Furthermore, several principles can be identified, distinguished, and sorted into three groups: conflict of laws principles (unity, universality, equality, mutual trust, cooperation and communication, subsidiarity, proportionality); procedural principles (efficiency, transparency, predictability, procedural justice, priority); and substantive principles (equal treatment of creditors, optimal realisation of the debtor's assets, debtor protection, protection of trust (for secured creditors or contractual partners), social protection (for employees or tenants). Using a principle-oriented approach, this book will have a significant impact for both deciding cases and shaping cross-border insolvency law. It offers both legislators and courts new substantive and methodological support in making decisions (for example: where the treatment of secured creditors, support for foreign insolvency practitioners, or even harmonisation of cross-border insolvency laws are at stake). [Subject: European Law, Bankruptcy Law, Insolvency Law, Finance Law]