European
Module
Diritto Europeo dei Contratti
Il
Diritto europeo dei contratti è una disciplina recente, poiché recenti sono
i provvedimenti normativi su cui verte. Esso è alla base di tutte le
transazioni effettuate all’interno del mercato unico europeo. Non è
difficile, dunque, intuire quanta importanza rivesta oggi.
L'istituzione di un Modulo Jean Monnet sul Diritto Europeo dei Contratti,
colma, quindi, una lacuna fino ad oggi esistente in materia come effetto di
diverse circostanze.
Da una
parte gli studiosi di diritto privato non hanno del tutto accettato
l'appartenenza di questo filone di studi alla loro area disciplinare.
Al
contempo, il diritto europeo dei contratti non è considerato parte
essenziale del diritto comunitario perché quest' ultimo verte soprattutto
sugli aspetti istituzionali.
In breve,
si tratta di una disciplina di confine e per questo poco approfondita,
sebbene gli sviluppi che seguiranno al processo di allargamento
lasciano presagire una crescita di attenzione sia da parte del mondo
accademico che da parte dei tecnici.
Solo il
forte desiderio di comprendere e far comprendere i processi in corso ha
finora sostenuto la fatica che comporta l’attivazione di nuovo insegnamento.
Spero di riuscire a condividere con tutti voi, durante i prossimi mesi, la
passione che spinge a non accontentarsi del “noto”. Se ciò accadrà io sarò
sinceramente felice.
Buon
lavoro
Marisaria
Maugeri

Jean Monnet Chair
DIRITTO CIVILE EUROPEO -
ACQUIS COMMUNAUTAIRE E PROSPETTIVE DI ARMONIZZAZIONE
The setting up of a Jean
Monnet Chair on “European Civil Law – Acquis communitaire and harmonisation
perspectives”, to be included as compulsory course within the second level
degree course on “EU Governance and International Politics” will provide
students attending this degree course with a deep knowledge of the European
contract law harmonisation process. In the last years this process has faced
a strong speeding up thanks to the increased awareness, spread not only
among lawyers (both scholars and practitioners) but also among economic and
social forces and the involved institutional actors, of its necessity for
the common market.
The
Course will consist of three main parts.
The
starting point of the first part will be the discipline of the consumer
protection within the EU, with special reference to the Council Directive
93/13 EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts. As a matter
of fact not only is this Directive an interesting piece of law for the
subject it touches, but it has been largely considered as a paradigm of a
new conception of contract, centred around the protection of the weaker
part. The Chair will, then, try to catch the deep meaning and rationale of
such a regulation in the framework of the process of market unification. A
more experienced audience – second level students - compared to that
attending the Jean Monnet European Module, mainly addressed to first level
student and then implying a descriptive approach to the subject, can allow a
more sophisticated methodology and approach.
Particularly, the unfolding of the rationale of the mentioned discipline
will help to set the limits of a conception that too much emphasises its
systematic meaning, and consequentially proposes its extension to all forms
of contracts involving “power asymmetries”. At the same time it will also
allow to figure out the real opportunities of analogical
application of the law itself in all
cases where the specific power asymmetry
consists in an “information gap”. In this perspective, that aims not only at
merely describing such a regulation, but also at unfolding its profound
rationale, the most relevant profiles will be analised through lectures,
round tables, workshops.
Such
activities will focus on the following main topics:
-
Interpretation of Standard
Contract Terms.
-
Standard Contract Terms and
Information Rules.
-
The Rules Applying when
Standard Contract Terms are Avoided.
-
Standard Contract Terms –
The Role of the Courts and Moral Suasion by Independent Authorities.
-
Standard Contract Terms and
Financial Contracts.
-
Standard Contract Terms and
Unilateral Promises.
-
The implementation of the
Directive in the Member States, concentrating on the issues: Scope of
Application; Integration or Incorporation of Standard Contract Terms into
the Contract; Interpretation of the General Standard of Fairness; the
Effects of the List of Unfair Terms.
-
Standard Contract Term and
the Enlargement Process.
The
second part of the Course will address other consumer protection laws, with
special emphasis of the Directives on “ package travel, package holidays and
package tours ” and on “Distance contracts”.
Finally,
assuming that the other two parts of the Course have offered a complete
information of the acquis communitaire in contractual law, we consider a
priority to inform students about future perspective of harmonisation of
substantive rules of European private law. This aim will be accomplished
through the analysis of the steps already taken in this direction by the
Commission (with the three communications in 2001, 2003, 2004), through the
study of the already existing “doctrinal sources” on the subject (Principles
Unidroit and Pecl), and, eventually, introducing the ongoing debate on the
opportunity of providing EU of a Civil Code.
The setting up of such a teaching course can
be then considered a topical necessity due to the novelty of the subjects
discussed, especially because such novelty has so far prevented their proper
treatment within the traditional basic courses such as Private Law and EC
Law.
Buon
lavoro
Marisaria
Maugeri