Résultats 5 555 ressources
-
-
Cette présentation du Nsountee dans la communauté Ngombale de l’Ouest-Cameroun a pour but de souligner la richesse des possibilités interculturelles qui s’offrent au droit. Par la prise en compte d’un droit naturel, droit spontané propre aux normes du Nsountee, nous tentons de nuancer la rigueur des règles du droit civil, droit édicté, tout en contribuant, éventuellement, à établir une forme de dialogue entre les divers discours qui se manifestent en droit des contrats. Ce qui nous ramène à l’idée de contrat à titre d’artéfact social. La question pour les juristes, in fine, serait donc d’établir si le recours à un champ d’études exotiques (droit oral, droit autochtone, non civiliste) peut aider à enrichir notre compréhension du contrat en droit civil et à quelles fins? Nous envisageons ici une possibilité de son enrichissement par le droit autochtone en cours de réhabilitation dans un contexte postcolonial d’interculturalité et de pluralisme normatif. Nous prenons acte du fait que l’invisibilisation, la délégitimation ou l’illégalisation des droits autochtones, pendant longtemps décrétés comme non en vigueur (non-droit, anti-droit, infra-droit) par l’ordre juridique dominant, en l’occurrence le droit positif étatique hérité de la colonisation, cèdent peu à peu la place à une forme de coexistence plus ou moins conflictuelle. À cet égard, la présente étude sur le Nsountee est un essai au sens littéraire qui, en plus de raconter l’histoire d’un droit traditionnel africain des contrats, « essaie » de susciter la réflexion autour d’une remise en cause de la dogmatique contractuelle du droit dit moderne.
-
-
-
-
-
This research paper seeks to address the role that good faith plays in South African contract law by first discussing its origin and then chronologically tracing its position from pre-1994 to today. The judgements of both the Supreme Court of Appeal and the Constitutional Court will be unpacked, as a means to understand the development of good faith over the years. The position that good faith plays in foreign jurisdictions will also be discussed, for the sake of achieving a universal understanding of how good faith is perceived around the world. The research concludes by placing good faith in its current role and context in South Africa, and also proposing a way forward.
-
This subject matter of this work is the prohibition of competition with the company of members of board of directors in joint stock companies under art. 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code. The prohibition of competition is a limitation on the commercial activities and the freedom of competition of a restricted party who has access to information, means or resources due to the legal relationship between parties which grant the restricted party a leverage in competition with the other. The core idea underlying the prohibition of competition is the necessity to protect the party benefiting from this prohibition against competitive activities of the restricted party. The prohibition of competition bans the restricted party from establishing competition with the party benefiting from the prohibition through competitive actions, ultimately from becoming the competitor of the beneficiary. The said competition relationship will occur in the event the services or products serving the same or similar needs are provided to the entirety or part of the same customers or customer group. Board members in joint stock company, having the prevailing right of access to all information and resources of the company leads to the risk that it may use this power for its own or other parties' benefit instead of that of the company. Hence, the prohibition of competition on board members regulated under article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code is one of the concrete examples of the duty of loyalty of a board member towards the company aiming to prevent such usages prioritizing the benefit of the member or of a third person over that of the company. The focal point of this work is the determination of the scope of application and conditions of this prohibition as a whole. The first chapter of this thesis aims to convey the conceptual basis of the prohibition of competition. In this scope, we first assessed the economic and legal basis of competition. Economic competition is the race/competition of two or more market actors in a specific market in order to engage in a transaction with its counterparty in the market through offering better prices, conditions, goods or services in order to be superior from its competitors. However, the intention to supersede its competitors and the efforts for this purpose may result in the misuse of the right to compete or in an act limiting or eliminating the competitive environment. The Republic of Turkey provides for a constitutional protection over a person's right to engage in commercial activities and, although not expressly regulated, right to compete. However, as is the case for all rights and liberties, the right and liberty to compete cannot be exercised without any limitation. Second, the scope of the prohibition of competition is assessed. In this regard, we tried to determine the elements of the prohibition of competition, its definition, and its legal categorization. Moreover, a comparison of the prohibition of competition with the provisions governing unjust competition aiming to establish honest and undisrupted competition as well as with the rules of Competition Law aiming to prevent disruption of competition through restrictive actions is provided in order to specify the prominent characteristics of the prohibition of competition. Third, the attributes of the provisions governing the prohibition of competition are assessed. Provisions governing prohibition of competition which do not relate to the public order but to the internal relations of parties, and which serve the personal benefit of the beneficiary, are not of a peremptory nature. The prohibition of competition, which materially limits the liberty of engaging in commercial activities protected under the constitutional law, is of an exceptional nature and hence the provisions governing the prohibition of competition need to be construed in a limited manner. Fourth, the prohibition of competition can be regulated in the letter of a contract through mutual agreement thereon by its parties, or the legislator occasionally provides for a legal provision governing the prohibition of competition by attributing a special importance to this prohibition with respect to a specific relationship between the parties. Last, in this first chapter, we identify the reflections of this prohibition of competition within the scope of the Law of Obligations, and the Law of Corporations. The second chapter of this work takes into consideration the reasons of regulating a prohibition of competition on board members, and its scope of application regarding the persons concerned. In this context we first broadly assessed the position of the board of directors, board members and affiliated commercial auxiliaries in a company. Then, the legislative provisions respectively of German Law, Swiss Law and Turkish Law governing the board members' prohibition of competition are specified. While in German Law, just as is the case in Turkish law, the prohibition of competition of board members is stipulated in § 88 of the German Stock Corporation Act, the Swiss Law does not regulate this prohibition of competition of board members with a statutory provision, nonetheless, this prohibition is accepted by the scholars. Thereafter, the reason for regulating the prohibition of competition of board members is assessed. In this scope, the duty of loyalty of a board member arises from the legal relationship between the member and the corporation being based on the principle of trust. The member must refrain from conflicting its interests with the interests of the corporation, in other words, from conflict of interests, due to its duty of loyalty. When the member engages in competition with the company, the interests of the company and the board member conflict with each other. The member is in a considerably advantageous position in this conflict compared to the company, due to the information and resources to which it has access thanks to its position within the company. For this reason, the duty of loyalty aiming to prevent the conflict of interest between the company and the member lies at the basis of the board member's prohibition of competition. Lastly, in this chapter, the persons subject to the prohibition of competition pursuant to article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code are identified. In this respect, the members of the board of directors as well as persons to whom management authorities are delegated fall within the scope of the ratione personae of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code. The commercial representatives and commercial proxies of a company are prohibited from competition pursuant to the prohibition of competition regarding commercial auxiliaries pursuant to article 553 of the Turkish Code of Obligations. Whereas a shareholder is not subject to the prohibition of competition with the company; this prohibition may only be regulated by a contract subject to the Law of Obligations. Furthermore, when evaluating the prohibition of competition of shareholders, whether the shareholder has a duty of loyalty to the company has been assessed under German Law, Swiss Law and Turkish Law. The third chapter of this work sets forth the scope of application of the prohibition of competition of board members with respect to its subject matter, place, and time. In order for a board member to violate the prohibition of competition with the company, the member must engage in an activity competing with the company. Pursuant to the first paragraph of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code, two types of competitive actions of board members are banned. The first type is the member engaging in an action which is a commercial transaction that falls within the scope of the field of activity of the company, on behalf of itself or a third party. Accordingly, all kinds of acts and actions of the member realized on behalf of itself or third parties which fall within the scope of activity of the corporation would constitute the breach of the prohibition. The scope of this prohibition also encompasses joining the managing body of another corporation. Furthermore, depending on the specifics of a concrete case, the same member being an employee of a competitor corporation under a service contract, or providing consultancy services or extending facilities to a competitor, or benefiting from a job opportunity which belonged to the company may also be construed to be within the scope of the prohibition of competition. The second type is the member being engaged as a partner with unlimited liability in a corporation engaging in the same types of commercial activities. In this regard, if a member becomes a partner of an ordinary partnership or a collective corporation, or a partner with unlimited liability of a commandite corporation, which engages in activities that fall within the scope of activities of the joint stock company, the prohibition will be breached. The prohibition of competition of the board member with the company may be lifted by an authorization granted by the general assembly pursuant to article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code. This permission to compete to be granted to a board member may be in the form of a prior approval or a later acknowledgement (ratification), in an expressed or implied manner. As a result of the member being permitted to compete, article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code will no longer apply even if the member engages in activities in competition with the company. The prohibition to compete of the board member lasts for the duration of the board membership. Once the membership ends, the parties must conclude an agreement in order to continue the prohibition of competition. The said agreement regarding the prohibition of competition will be subject to form requirements to be valid. Pursuant to the liberty of contract inherent in the Law of Obligations, the parties may freely execute an agreement regarding the prohibition of competition, provided they comply with the provisions in paragraph 2 of article 23 of the Civil Code or article 26 and first paragraph of article 27 of the Turkish Commercial Code. The prohibition to compete of board members is valid as long as they execute the activities of the company, and within the geography where the clientele of the corporation is located. The fourth and last chapter of this work is devoted to the consequences of breach of the prohibition to compete by a board member. If a member of the board of directors violates this prohibition, the consequence of this breach is regulated in the first paragraph of art. 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code. Accordingly, the joint stock company is granted with certain elective rights. Such that, primarily the company may request compensation from the member in breach of the prohibition of competition. Second, it may be requested that the transaction is deemed concluded on behalf of the joint stock company, third, that the benefits arising from the agreement the member concludes on behalf of third parties belong to the joint stock company. In its request for compensation, the joint stock company must prove the action of the board member violating the prohibition of competition, that the corporation suffered losses from this activity, and the causal link between this activity and the loss of the company. In its request for the transaction to be deemed concluded on its behalf, the company requests for the economic consequences of the transactions the member concluded in violation of the prohibition of competition on its behalf. In its request for the benefits arising from the agreement, the company requests that benefits arising from the agreement the member concluded on behalf of third parties are left to itself. At this point, we materially benefited from the German doctrine and jurisprudence in explaining the claims requesting that a transaction is deemed concluded on behalf of the company and that the benefits from the transactions are left to the company. These rights granted in the first paragraph of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code are not cumulative but elective. Pursuant to the second paragraph of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code, the authority to chose one of the elective rights granted to the company belongs to the members of the board of directors, excluding the member having violated the prohibition of competition. The third paragraph of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code regulates a dual prescription period of three months and one year. These periods are with respect to the exercise by the company of its elective right to make a claim. The first is the period of three months whose commencement will be determined based on the knowledge by other members that an action subject to the prohibition of competition is realized or that a board member joined another corporation. The second period is the period of one year commencing from the realization of the action violating the prohibition to compete. This one-year period is independent from other members' knowledge that the prohibition to compete has been breached. The corporation may raise other claims against the member violating the prohibition of competition which are not stipulated under article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code. Accordingly, the corporation may request that the member violating the prohibition of competition through joining a competing corporation as a partner with unlimited liability or joining the managing body of a competitive corporation resigns from this corporation or managing body. Further, the company may dismiss the member violating the prohibition of competition from board membership. Again, the company may initiate a lawsuit to cease the ongoing violation of the prohibition of competition by a board member, or a lawsuit of preclusion prior to probable breaches which have not yet occurred. In this chapter, lastly, the fourth paragraph of article 396 of the Turkish Commercial Code is assessed. This paragraph regulates that provisions governing liability of the members of the board of directors are reserved. This is a new provision which was not present in the abrogated Turkish Commercial Code no. 6762, newly introduced under the Turkish Commercial Code. In this context, we tried to determine the purpose and characteristics of this provision and concluded this work.
-
La propriété industrielle a pour objet principal la protection des créations de l’esprit liées à l’industrie et au commerce. Elle concerne des actifs créés principalement pour le progrès de la technologie, de l’industrie et du commerce, comme les brevets, les dessins et les modèles industriels, les marques de produits ou de services, les appellations d’origine et les circuits intégrés. Comme tous les objets de propriété, ces droits ont un propriétaire et sont susceptibles de produire un revenu. C’est pourquoi ils sont considérés comme un actif. De plus, comme tous les objets de propriété, ils résultent souvent d’un investissement et doivent donc être rentables, d’une façon ou d’une autre. The main purpose of industrial property is to protect intellectual creations related to industry and trade. It relates to assets created primarily for the advancement of technology, industry and commerce, such as patents, industrial designs and models, product or service trademarks, appellations of origin and integrated circuits. Like all property objects, these rights have an owner and are capable of generating income. Therefore, they are considered an asset. In addition, like all property objects, they often result from an investment and must therefore be profitable in some way.
-
-
-
-
Depuis quelque temps, nous recevons constamment des actualités et des commentaires sur les « Non-fungible Tokens » (jetons non fongibles), la croissance exponentielle du marché des « crypto-arts » , l’utilisation de ces NFT dans les secteurs de la musique, de l’audiovisuel, de l’édition et de la mode et, bien sûr, leur projection non seulement dans les réseaux sociaux, mais aussi dans le métavers. L’avalanche d’informations, que ces nouveaux « actifs » ont générée, a suscité des opinions mitigées, allant du scepticisme total à l’enthousiasme le plus radical. Cet article vise à aborder cette question d’un point de vue concret et clair, en analysant le contexte actuel, en mettant en évidence les défis juridiques et économiques posés par l’utilisation des NFT et en discutant des questions clés pour comprendre ce que sont ces nouveaux actifs virtuels, à quoi ils servent, comment nous pouvons les utiliser, leurs risques et les opportunités qu’ils offrent. Recently, we have been receiving constant news and comments about NFTs (non-fungible tokens), the exponential growth of the “crypto-arts” market, the use of these NFTs in the music, audiovisual, publishing and fashion sectors… and, of course, their projection not only in social networks but also in the metaverse. The avalanche of information that these new ‘assets’ have generated has provoked mixed opinions, ranging from total scepticism to the most radical enthusiasm. This article aims to approach this issue from a realistic and clear perspective, analysing the current context, highlighting the legal and economic challenges posed by the use of NFTs and discussing the key questions for understanding what NFTs are, what they are used for, how we can use them, their risks and the opportunities they offer.
-
Sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures are measures aimed at the protection of human, animal and plant life and health, within World Trade Organization (WTO) Member territories, from the risks associated with the introduction and spread of pests and diseases into such territories through trade. The WTO, through its Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (WTO-SPS), guides the application of sanitary and phytosanitary measures and provides a set of guiding principles, rights and obligations applicable to Member States. Dispute resolution through the processes of the WTO is available to Members on a Member to Member level within a defined scope and on specific terms. Private parties who operate within the SPS chain at a national level, whether involved in import or export or neither, are dependent on solutions to barriers or disputes available to them through national legislation. In the absence of an enabling legal framework to facilitate aspects of trade such as certainty and continuity in standard setting, the basis of measures taken in science, transparency and legal recourse to resolving barriers or disputes arising, private parties are vulnerable to fluctuations in, for example, their country’s disease-free status. Private parties are also vulnerable to losing relevance as trading partners in periods of ongoing SPS events and to the loss of trust that trading partners have in the country’s ability to trade safely. These are matters that affect private parties who do not have legal recourse to the WTO dispute resolution procedures which are well within WTO concern as they are directly related to the purpose of SPS measures, the principles, rights and obligations on which they are based. Given the importance of agriculture and the increasing inseparability of international rights, obligations and principles in a field of WTO law such as SPS, the importance of a national legislative framework in as far as being the translator of such rights, obligations and principles into legally enforceable rights, obligations, principles, processes and procedures is significant. The rights, obligations, and principles of SPS measures apply to all products, processes and procedures that are within the scope of the agreement and may include at least 36 chapters of the harmonised tariff book. It is necessary to consider also that international trade, national trade and the associated rights, obligations, and principles of the WTO-SPS agreement interact with the social, political, and economic realities of the country within the countries to which the agreement applies. Therefore, researching some of the persistent challenges experienced by the red meat industry in South Africa prone to negative trade-related consequences during and after the outbreak of a notifiable disease, provides insight into the perception of the ability of the legislative framework to provide solutions to these consequences. This research applies a mixed methodology approach whereby qualitative research by means of semi-structured interviews was combined with doctrinal legal research and a quantitative content analysis using Rprogramming. The qualitative research focused on the role of legislation and the perspectives of selected actors in the red-meat industry, specifically in reference to the foot-and-mouth-disease (FMD) outbreaks and subsequent loss of disease-free status since 2019. The doctrinal legal analysis and content analysis focused on the SPS-related legislative framework. The combination of these methods provides a multi-perspective analysis of SPS measures as barriers to trade from a South African perspective and contributes to the mixed-methods turn in legal studies. The objective of this research is to identify and explore persistent challenges to the prevention and resolution of barriers or disputes connected to sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures in the South African context. Ultimately, this research recommends potential practical solutions to the identified challenges with specific focus on SPS-related barriers or disputes that are beyond the strict terms of dispute resolution available through the World Trade Organization (WTO).
-
Compliance with the GDPR while using blockchain technology for data processing results in compliance issues, due to the fact that the blockchain and the GDPR employ different methods to ensure privacy-by-design and privacy-by-default. The blockchain is built on disintermediation and relative decentralization, whereas the GDPR aims for re-intermediation and relative centralization of the data protection process. This paper provides an overview of and suggestions on how to secure compliance with the GDPR while processing data using the blockchain. A focus is placed on the data protection impact assessment on the blockchain network, issues in identifying and determining the role(s) of sole and joint data controllers and data processors, obstacles to exercising the right to rectification and right to be forgotten when the data is recorded on the blockchain, GDPR data transfer requirements as applied to the blockchain, and the protection of privacy in the process of creating blockchain-based smart contracts.
-
There is a growing concern over the qualifications and social interactions of investment treaty arbitrators. The characteristics of this class of international adjudicators have significantly evolved over the past few decades. The contemporary arbitration panelist interacts within a broad and complex network of arbitration participants. Their patterns of social behavior both within the community of panelists and within the broader network of actors in arbitration proceedings have fundamentally reshaped the composition, dynamics and culture of the arbitration community. These new forms of relationships and patterns of conduct are new in the context of public international law. These have created unprecedented challenges to the investment treaty arbitration system. New manifestations of attributes and social behavior of panelists demonstrate inadequacies of the existing standards, rules and procedures that govern panelists. This study surveys problematic patterns of social behavior of investment treaty adjudicators and shows how certain instances of social behavior inevitably or potentially jeopardize the very foundations of the system. This research empirically examines the voting behavior of two distinct groups of party-appointed panelists, and the results reveal a relationship between appointments and the decision-making attitude of adjudicators. It further methodically maps the pool of ICSID panelists and answers the question ‘who are ICSID panelists?’ It reviews the evolution of the attributes of ICSID adjudicators, assesses the composition of the ICSID pool, and evaluates the social interactions of this group of investment treaty adjudicators. To address the challenges that investment treaty arbitration faces, a radical and multidimensional shift is occurring in the system. This transformation is directed towards greater control over the qualifications and conduct of adjudicators. These developments reconstruct the composition of the pool of adjudicators and influence how they interact with other actors in investment treaty arbitration proceedings. The ongoing reform progress indicates that the attributes and behavior of future investment treaty adjudicators would likely be different from the characteristics and conduct of the contemporary generation of panelists.
-
Secoué par le vent de la démocratie et de la libéralisation économique qui a soufflé sur le continent africain au cours des années 90, l’État du Cameroun s’était davantage préoccupé d’encadrer les échanges commerciaux. La problématique de la protection du consommateur était secondaire. Il a fallu attendre les années 2010 pour que soient enfin adoptés une loi relative à la protection du consommateur et d’autres textes qui ont transformé le visage du droit camerounais de la consommation. La présente étude met en lumière, dans une approche comparée, les avancées réalisées dans la protection des droits aussi bien substantiels que processuels des consommateurs. Elle souligne également l’apport des institutions et des mouvements consuméristes à la défense, encore émergente, des intérêts non matériels des populations et leur influence sur cette dernière.
-
Explorer
Thématiques
- Droit des assurances (600)
- Droit financier, économique, bancaire (472)
- Arbitrage, médiation, conciliation (413)
- Droit des sociétés commerciales (375)
- Droit commercial, droit des affaires (351)
-
Droit civil
(315)
- Droit des obligations (108)
- Droit des personnes et de la famille (76)
- Droit des biens (59)
- Droit des successions (18)
- Droit maritime (290)
- Propriété intellectuelle, industrielle (237)
- Droit communautaire, harmonisation, intégration (234)
- Droit du travail & sécurité sociale (200)
- Droit des transports et logistique (192)
- Commerce international (165)
- Droit des investissements (155)
- Procédures collectives (142)
- Droit pénal - Droit pénal des affaires (136)
- Droit de la concurrence (102)
- Droit des sûretés (99)
- Responsabilité sociétale des entreprises (98)
- Droit processuel (88)
- Droit de la consommation, distribution (87)
- Procédures simplifiées de recouvrement & voies d'exécution (81)
- Commerce électronique (71)
- Droit de la conformité et gestion des risques (66)
- Droit des coopératives (51)
- Encyclopédies, dictionnaires, codes (37)
- Droit minier et des industries extractives (36)
- Jurilinguisme (16)
- Actes uniformes, règlements (9)
Thèses et Mémoires
- Thèses de doctorat (2 108)
- Mémoires (Master/Maitrise) (1 199)
Type de ressource
- Acte juridique (3)
- Article de colloque (20)
- Article de revue (1 406)
- Chapitre de livre (56)
- Enregistrement vidéo (17)
- Livre (165)
- Norme (6)
- Prépublication (23)
- Présentation (5)
- Rapport (23)
- Thèse (3 831)
Année de publication
-
Entre 1900 et 1999
(613)
- Entre 1960 et 1969 (2)
- Entre 1970 et 1979 (77)
- Entre 1980 et 1989 (263)
- Entre 1990 et 1999 (271)
-
Entre 2000 et 2025
(4 938)
- Entre 2000 et 2009 (600)
- Entre 2010 et 2019 (2 462)
- Entre 2020 et 2025 (1 876)
- Inconnue (4)