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This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
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As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
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LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
______
LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
______
As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
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LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
This book is also available open access in e-book formats and online via IntersentiaOnline thanks to financing by the European Unions Justice Programme (20142020). Read it here.
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As on 1 January 2020, some three percent of the population of the EU were citizens of one member state living and/or working in the territory of a member state other than that of which they are a citizen. In addition, around five percent of the resident population of the EU consisted of third country nationals. Naturally, these diasporic groups formed cross-border couples consisting of partners of different nationalities or partners of the same nationality both living in a country other than that of their origin. This reality, to be sure, raises many legal questions for the persons involved where the national family laws of several countries come into play. In an effort to bring about added legal certainty and predictability to couples in cross-border situations, the EU adopted several instruments often referred to together as EU private international family law.
This volume examines the two most recent of these: the Matrimonial Property Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/1103) and the Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships (Regulation (EU) 2016/1104), together referred to as the Twin Regulations. These have proved to be a crucial piece of the European family law puzzle, regulating aspects of the everyday lives of those concerned. This book presents an in-depth analysis of these instruments, revealing the substance of the provisions in the regulations and exploring their practical implications in EU family law by discussing questions that are closely related to matrimonial and partnership property regimes. The contributors also cover the relevant CJEU case law and, where available, the national case law of the EU countries. Case studies are used to interrogate the potentialities of these new instruments.
This book is a significant contribution to the literature on private international family law in general and on EU matrimonial property regimes in particular. It is addressed to legal professionals as well as academics and law students.
With forewords from Irmantas Jarukaitis (CJEU), Paolo Pasqualis (CNUE), Alberto Perez Cedillo (IAFL European Chapter), Fernando Rodriguez Prieto (Signum Foundation) and Juan Ignacio Signes de Mesa (CJEU) and contributions by Lucia Ruggeri (University of Camerino), Agne Limante (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Nea Pogorelcnik Vogrinc (University of Ljubljana), María José Cazorla González (University of Almeria), Stefano Deplano (University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli), Filip Dougan (University of Ljubljana,), Roberto Garetto (University of Camerino), Manuela Giobbi (University of Camerino,), Nenad Hlaca (University of Rijeka), Egle Kavoliunaite-Ragauskiene (Law Institute of the Lithuanian Centre for Social Sciences), Jerca Kramberger kerl (University of Ljubljana), Ivana Kunda (University of Rijeka), Mercedes Soto Moya (University of Granada), Martina Ticic (University of Rijeka), Francesco Giacomo Viterbo (University of Salento) and Sandra Winkler (University of Rijeka).
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LUCIA RUGGERI is an author and an editor of numerous publications. She was the coordinator of the EU Project Personalized Solution in European Family and Succession Law PSEFS. At the moment, she is the coordinator of the EU Project E-training on EU Family Property Regimes EU-FamPro.
AGNE LIMANTE has a number of publications in the field of private international family law. She is actively engaged in international research projects. Recently, she took part in several EU co-founded projects that were designed to train judges, lawyers and social services on private international family law instruments.
NEA POGORELCNIK VOGRINC has published several papers in national and foreign journals, is and author of the individual chapters of ten books and a sole author of the book Zacasne odredbe v civilnih sodnih postopkih (Provisional measures in civil court procedures). She is a researcher at the three national and three European projects in the field of civil and European law.
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