Theory and Practice of Harmonisation
Theory and Practice of Harmonisation
Theory and Practice of Harmonisation
Academic Director:
Professor Mads Andenas, University of Oslo
Harmonisation is an important feature of the modern legal system. Harmonisation of the laws
of the Member States is a core instrument of the European Union. Many international treaty
obligations entail duties to adopt conform legislation and ensure conform application.
International and regional human rights treaties provide important examples of this. There is a
considerable scholarly literature on different harmonisation issues, but not bringing together
the outcome of this scholarship in a comparative analysis or in developing more general theory
on the harmonisation process or different aspects of it. There is a need for bringing together
scholars of a range of legal, social science and humanities disciplines, including from within
the law, general legal theory or jurisprudence, constitutional law, comparative law,
international law, human rights law and EU law, and the different national and international
legal areas most affected by harmonisation. Contributions are made in integration studies,
international relations, European studies, and political theory. Moving freely over the
boundaries that divide the law, and the fragmented scholarly disciplines, may usefully combine
perspectives in interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary scholarship. In this way one may
provide models for, and improve, the understanding of the harmonisation process.
The procedures for adopting the harmonising instrument, and for subsequent
amendments to it, are under rapid development. In the EU, the legislative procedures are a
central constitutional concern, and are subject to continuous reform. Different treaty regimes
offer new and alternative mechanisms.
The form of the harmonising instrument offer much variety and innovation.
International treaties and conventions do not follow universal models. In the EU, there is an
important difference between directives and regulations, but also the regulation, which has
direct effect without any legislative transposition, often requires different implementation
measures to have its effect in national law. Some main types of directives are minimum
standards directives, maximum standard directives, framework directives, and directives in the
process of open method of coordination. The relationship to the fundamental freedoms in the
EC Treaty is another issue. For international treaties and conventions, there is the relationship
to customary international law and other treaties and conventions.
The role of international financial institutions, such as the World Bank and the IMF, in
legal harmonisation across a wide field, is controversial and requires further analysis to be
fully understood. Harmonisation, aid and development bring up many related issues.
Informal harmonisation processes, outside the intergovernmental fora, are of increasing
importance. The role of model codes, principles and other outcomes of such processes is
another field of study. Their interaction with the intergovernmental organs, and their reception
in contract practice or directly by national legislators or courts merits further attention.
Important examples here are Principles, Definitions and Model Rules of European Private
Law. Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). Interim Outline Edition. (2008), the
research carried out by the Study Group on a European Civil Code (the von Bar Group) and the
Research Group on EC Private Law (Acquis Group) and other academic and scholarly projects
and their relationship with more formal EU procedures, see for instance the European
Commission’s 2003 Action Plan on a More Coherent European Contract Law merits study.
Transposition in national law takes different form in national legislation, and the
procedures vary as well. Harmonisation has affected the form of national legislation, and the
sources of law in the national legal system. Court practice in the application of harmonised
law follows yet other principles and patterns. The response in case law to the new sources of
law that can assist in promoting uniformity, or in some field, the ways in which the lack of
such sources are compensated for, is of particular interest. The use of judgments from other
international or national jurisdictions is one current issue. Informal networks of judges
cooperate across jurisdictional boundaries in the application of international instruments,
assisting one another in finding sources and practical solutions to the uniformity problems.
Amendment and monitoring of the transposition and subsequent practice under national
law is another area where there in some areas are highly developed regimes, and in others
practically nothing following the adoption of a convention. There are models involving an
independent international monitoring body, or more judicialised institutions, or combinations
of supranational monitoring and court institutions. Novel forms of institutionalised peer
review have developed over the last couple of decades.
Enforcement and sanctioning provide other challenges, closely related to monitoring
and amendment.
The experiences with harmonised regimes provide an extensive material which is well
suited for research. In the EU, there is an emerging scholarship comparing the transposition of
directives in different national laws. This provides a basis for the Review of the Consumer
Acquis, which is another of the harmonisation projects of the European Commission, currently
limited to eight directives, including the Consumer Sales Directive and the Unfair Terms
Directive, leaving aside other directives in the consumer field such as the Consumer Credit
Directive, the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive and the Product Liability Directive.
Maximum harmonisation and the use of mandatory rules in the directives may have had a
profound effect on the private of the Member States, which if it has had such an effect, remains
underexplored.
The international conventions in the long established tradition for harmonisation of
commercial law provides another field of emerging scholarship, see for instance, the United
Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, 1980), the UNCITRAL
Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration 1985, UNIDROIT’s Principles of
International Commercial Contracts, the EBRD’s Secured Transactions Project, and the ICC’s
Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits.
In comparative law there is a current discourse about legal transplants. There is also a
challenge to the idea of convergence between national legal systems and traditions. One issue
here is to link the theoretical models that have emerged here with the scholarship on
harmonisation in different fields.
This year’s W.G. Hart Conference will address these issues and others related to the
theory and practice of harmonisation.
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DRAFT PROGRAMME
(the programme remains subject to change)
09.00 Registration
Opening Address:
Professor Sir Francis Jacobs QC
The European Common Frame of Reference and Credit Securities – a suitable case for
treatment?
Professor Gerard McCormack, University of Leeds
11.00 Coffee
Harmonisation with international human rights standards: British courts and the
European Court of Human Rights
Merris Amos, Queen Mary, University of London
13.00 LUNCH
International Competition Law Harmonisation and the WTO: Past, Present and Future
Dr Jurgita Malinauskaite, Brunel University
One Path and Many Directions - Voluntary harmonization of competition regulations and
the development of national competition regulation in the case of China. (WTO)
Qianlan Wu, London School of Economics, and Institute of European Studies, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences
The TRIPS Agreement, Harmonize of Intellectual Property Laws and the Impact on the
Legislation of Arabic Countries
Anan Younes, University of Leicester
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PARALLEL SESSIONS
15.30 Tea
18.30 Reception
PARALLEL SESSIONS
The Europeanisation of Private Law Through the Looking Glass of Legal Transplants - A
New Analysis of the Harmonisation Project
Dr Leone Niglia, University of Aberdeen
11.00 Coffee
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11.30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
PARALLEL SESSIONS
Progressing ‘common constitutional traditions’ for the EU: the case of marriage for all
Jackie Jones, University of the West of England
The post accession Harmonization with EC law in the Republic of Cyprus: Constitutional
Constraints and Gaps
Dr. Constantinos Kombos, University of Cyprus
(to be confirmed)
13.00 LUNCH
PARALLEL SESSIONS
The Common Frame of Reference in European Contract Law; soft law and civil society
Dr Jacobien W Rutgers, VU University, Amsterdam
15.30 Tea
16.00 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
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DAY THREE: THURSDAY 26 JUNE
The Acquis Principles: Critical Reflections on the Drafting Process and Potential Future
Application of the Principles
Dr Christian Twigg-Flesner, University of Hull
Title to be confirmed
Stylianos Andreadakis, University of Leicester
PARALLEL SESSIONS
Harmonisation and The Rule of Law. Theoretical Troubles and New Hopes
Dr Giovanni Cogliandro, University of Rome
11.30 Coffee
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PARALLEL SESSIONS
The Fallacy of the Common Core: Polycontextualism in Surety Protection - a ‘hard case’
in harmonisation discourse
Mel Kenny and James Devenney, Durham University
13.00 LUNCH
The Draft UNCITRAL Convention on the Carriage of Goods by Sea and arbitration: The
road to autonomy of international law on carriage of goods?
Miriam Goldby, University of Surrey
PARALLEL SESSIONS
Lex Mercatoria as Transnational Commercial Law: Is the claim that the Lex Mercatoria
is preferentially for the ‘mercatocracy’ (1) true?
Adaora Okwor, University of Sheffield
15.30 Tea