Résultats 38 ressources
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Pour faire face au phénomène de la mondialisation du marché international des affaires et des défis qu’il met en jeu, le développement économique semble s’orienter de plus en plus vers une approche régionale afin de mieux défendre les intérêts nationaux pourtant souvent contradictoires. En effet, la mondialisation de l’économie exige la mondialisation du droit., l’un des exemples le plus illustratif, nous viens de l’Afrique, qui a privilégié l’intégration régionale par le droit des affaires, à travers la création de l’Organisation de l’OHADA qui devait permettre à une partie de l’Afrique de mieux s’intégrer à l’économie mondiale, de faciliter les échanges entre les Etats parties, d’attirer les investisseurs étrangers, et de mettre fin à l’insécurité juridique. Selon les initiateurs du traité OHADA, l’intégration économique qui est une condition sine qua non du développement de la région, ne peut réussir, qu’à travers la mise en place d’une harmonisation du droit des affaires. Le fonctionnement de L’OHADA s’appuie sur un certain nombre d’organes et sur l’élaboration de plusieurs Actes Uniformes touchant au domaine du Droit des Affaires constituant ainsi le droit dérivé. Néanmoins face à un environnement économique et juridique en constante évolution, l’OHADA était dans l’obligation de mener des réformes d’ordre institutionnel et normatif.
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The purpose of this study is to present the main facets of online dispute resolution, including a definition of the term, the types of resolution available, and the most recent legal regulations in this area. The article is an in-depth study of this field, discussing online mediation and electronic arbitration, their uses and their relationships with e-commerce. The strengths and weaknesses of online dispute resolution are identified and used to help formulate de lege ferenda stipulations. The paper is divided into three parts. Part I looks at preliminary aspects of online dispute resolution (ODR), including a definition of the term and an examination of its phases of development, implementation examples and the relationship between ODR and technology. Part II is devoted to examining the two most frequent forms of ODR: online mediation and electronic arbitration. Part III is an analysis of consumer disputes arising from commercial transactions made using electronic communications. As an example of the implementation of ODR, the author emphasises the importance of new European regulations on that and alternative dispute resolution (ADR): Directive 2013/11/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2013 on alternative dispute resolution for consumer disputes and amending Regulation (EC) No 2006/2004 and Directive 2009/22/EC (Directive on consumer ADR), and Regulation (EU) No 524/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2013 on online dispute resolution for consumer disputes and amending Regulation (EC) No 2006/2004 and Directive 2009/22/EC (Regulation on consumer ODR).
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The use of mobile communication devices such as mobile phones, smartphones, tablet computers or notebooks with access to the internet has become an everyday phenomenon in today's business world. However, whenever mobile communications are used for the purposes of contract formation, that is, the mobile dispatch of offers or acceptances, the mobility of the communicating parties raises important difficulties for the application of traditional legal rules: The fact that messages transmitted via phone, email or SMS can be dispatched and received  at virtually any  place on  earth challenges the categories of private international law and international contract law, which are based on the (unspoken) assumption that parties communicate from their home country. The existing legal framework for cross-border contracts therefore hardly takes into account the possibility that parties may move across borders, and that the place of their communications may accordingly vary.The present article addresses the legal difficulties and uncertainties that cross border  mobile communication  raises under international rules of law. It elaborates on the traditional role of the site of communication in this context before scrutinising how 'mobility friendly' the provisions  of the relevant  conventions  developed  by the United Nations, the Hague Conference for Private International Law and other organisations  are. In doing  so,  it critically  discusses  in particular article 10(3) of the UN Electronic Communications Convention of 2005, the most recent attempt at regulating mobile communications. Finally, it identifies a number of problems that have hitherto been overlooked (as notably the interaction of article 10(3) of the UN Electronic Communications Convention with traditional private international law rules on the formal validity of contracts) and proposes appropriate solutions.
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Foreign direct investment (FDI) plays an important role in the world economy and has the potential to contribute towards accelerating the process of economic growth and sustainable development in the least developed countries (LDCs). The paper provides a brief overview of recent trends and patterns in FDI flows to the LDCs, and then takes stock of the policies, programmes and measures pursued by host and home countries and by international organizations to stimulate FDI flows to LDCs and increase their benefits for these countries. It then lays out a number of policy proposals on how flows to LDCs, and the benefits associated with them, can be enhanced. Finally, it outlines some options for international action to strengthen such efforts – proposals and options that are also relevant to other developing countries.
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This study examined economic integration through trade between BRIGS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) countries and sub-Saharan Africa. The study examines the comparative advantages of the two economic blocks with respect to the exportation of merchandise (food, agricultural raw materials, fuels, ores and metals, and manufactures). The findings of this study reveal the actual status of these two regions as economic partners in each of the five subsectors of merchandise exports.The  trend  shows  that,  with  the  exception  of  manufactures  exports, the competitiveness of all subsectors of the merchandise  exports of BRIGS is characterised by a  declining  trend.  BRIGS has  a  comparative advantage in the world in the exportation of manufactures and fuels, and comparative disadvantage in the export of food, agricultural raw materials, and ores and metals.  Interestingly, manufactures are  continuously  and consistently  in a steadily rising trend. This is evidence that BRIGS's structural transformation towards higher valued-added commodities is proceeding well, which means that policy makers should be considering ways of enhancing it further.In the case of sub-Saharan Africa, with the exception of manufactures exports, it is found to have comparative advantages in all merchandise exports. Sub- Saharan Africa’s competitive advantage is the highest in the exportation of ores and metals, followed by fuels, agricultural raw materials and food. Sub-Saharan Africa has a comparative disadvantage in the export of manufactures throughout the period considered in this study. This implies that the prospects of structural transformation to downstream of the higher value-added commodities export part of the supply chain are good: the slow pace of transformation towards higher value-added goods should therefore be demanding the attention of policy makers. The study has revealed that sub-Saharan Africa is more competitive than BRICS in the exportation of ores and metals, fuel, agricultural raw materials and food. On the other hand, BRICS is more competitive than sub-Saharan Africa in the export of manufactures.The study has also revealed that significant economic integration can be sustained  between  BRICS  and  sub-Saharan  Africa  in  the  exportation  of all merchandise subsectors. Specifically, sub-Saharan Africa is a potential destination market for BRICS’s exports of manufactures. Conversely, BRICS is also a potential destination market for sub-Saharan Africa’s exports of ores and metals, fuel, agricultural raw materials and food.Economic integration between BRICS and sub-Saharan Africa favourably influences peace and stability in the regions. Sustaining peace and stability in these regions also favourably influences the wellbeing of the communities.
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Economic co-operation and integration brings with it a need to harmonise mechanisms for the regulation of international trade, not only at a public-law level between states but also at a private-law level between traders inter partes. It is often forgotten that differences in the substantive law applicable to a contract function as a non-tariff barrier to trade. Because international trade facilitates economic development, the focus in this article is on the harmonisation of sales laws. Traditionally, private law harmonisation has been conducted by international private or inter-state organisations that specialise in the harmonising of law at a global level. Today, private organisations and groups devoted to harmonising business laws, as well as regional economic integration organisations, are also pursuing legal harmonisation. Global, regional and domestic laws now all exist in the same area of the law, which can give rise to duplication of efforts and problems with the co-existence of global and regional sales law. This article will discuss these issues with reference to the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) and selected regional laws in considering whether regional harmonisation can act as a stepping stone towards increased harmonisation at a global level or whether it is to be viewed as a threat to global integration and harmonisation.
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Globalisation and the increasing movement of capital and labour across international borders, with the exception of migrant workers who are facing major obstacles due to immigration laws, are creating a situation where laws in general and labour laws in particular are acquiring an international character. International bodies such as the United Nations, the International Labour Organisation and the European Union have adopted various international norms and standards to which most countries have agreed and which have established minimum international standards for basic universal human rights and worker rights. The Southern African Development Community is a transnational organisation that has also adopted certain basic norms and standards in its Treaty, Charter on Fundamental Social Rights and various protocols that are applicable to all citizens within the Community. In this contribution, the concept of transnational labour relations is considered. The different international approaches towards transnational labour relations are evaluated, as is the manner in which the European Union approached the integration of regional labour standards. The author seeks to establish what the Southern African Development Community can learn from the European Union’s experience and in what way a transnational labour relations system or regional labour standards regime for the Southern African Development Community can be established.
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In Congolese law, the legal capacity of the married women is subjected to certain limitations. These restrictions include, notably, the exercise of professional activities for which marital authorization is a legal requirement. This is why some consider the adherence of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to OHADA as an opportunity in favour of the married woman, claiming that all provisions of domestic law clinging on the legal incapacity of the latter are automatically repealed because supposedly contrary to the uniform Acts, and in this case the uniform Act relating to general commercial law (AUDCG). This paper attempts to meticulously analyse the alleged contribution resulting from the OHADA law and manages to demonstrate that the status of the married woman in professional matters from the standpoint of OHADA has indeed not changed. A first step in that direction could have been for the AUDCG to explicitly recognize the married woman's ability to freely engage into trade. Unfortunately the corresponding provision only deals with the status of the spouse of the trader, thus leaving the issue of legal capacity of the married woman on commercial matters to the national laws of each of the member states. Even though some progress in commercial law may be recognized, this could not cover other professions governed by national legislation and that are, consequently, out of the scope of the Uniform Acts. Hence, a genuine reform in order to release the married women from the marital authorization regime is a necessity.
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Cooperative societies in the Western Highlands (West and North West regions) of Cameroon is an age old institution which started with the arrival of the European colonialists towards the end of the nineteenth century. The fertile soils of this region favors agricultural activities thereby giving rise to many cooperatives in the region. The cooperative societies that have been developed in these areas are the type found in sub Saharan Africa which has stood the test of time more than half a century whereby the other cooperatives elsewhere in the same country have failed. The question this article is about to provide answers is to what has made these cooperatives in the Western Highlands of Cameroon able to stand the test of time when others are quitting the scene. To come out with this scientific article we have implored the active participatory research methodology. The analysis shows that these cooperatives since their creation have been imploring certain innovative measures to make them adapt to the many constraints in their sector.
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I) L’indifférence du statut de la puissance publique dans l’applicabilité du droit communautaire A) La prépondérance du critère matériel d’application du droit communautaire 1) Le critère de commercialité dans la législation OHADA 2) L’entreprise dans la législation UEMOA B) Le maintien exceptionnel du critère organique pour l’application du droit communautaire 1) Une immunité d’exécution conférée aux organismes publics 2) L’élargissement par la CCJA du spectre des personnes bénéficiaires de l’immunité d’exécution II) Une restriction du champ d’application du droit administratif A) L’expansion du doit communautaire dans les secteurs d’activité de la puissance publique 1) La soumission du service public aux règles concurrentielles 2) L’immixtion du droit privé dans le domaine des contrats administratifs B) Le contournement du juge de l’administration 1) Le droit pour les personnes publiques de recourir à l’arbitrage 2) La renonciation par l’administration à son privilège de juridiction Conclusion
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La doctrine a souvent débattu sur la nature du droit du cyberespace, c’est-à-dire le type de règles qui doivent encadrer les transactions électroniques. La formation du contrat électronique B2B et B2C permet d’aborder ce débat sous un angle pratique, qui met le législateur devant deux options connues : l’une, qui encourage l’élaboration de règles typiques, compte tenu d’une spécificité présumée de ces contrats ; l’autre, tendant à privilégier le droit existant, éventuellement adapté. Le formalisme issu des récentes productions législatives, notamment en droit de la cyberconsommation, réaffirme le rôle essentiel du consentement dans la formation du contrat, avec la reconduction automatique des opérations traditionnelles de l’offre et de l’acceptation. Mais dans le cyberespace, la manière d’exprimer ces deux opérations bénéficie de balises pratiques plus ou moins précises, peut-être pour éviter que des règles impératives en la matière ne vieillissent trop rapidement à cause du contexte technologique en perpétuelle transformation. Or, cette hésitation, peut-être ce choix, a fait émerger plusieurs modalités d’expression de l’acceptation dont la validité n’est pas acquise de façon mécanique, mais demeure fréquemment suspendue à l’appréciation des juges. Mais en examinant les motifs progressivement développés par les tribunaux en common law et en droit civil, de même qu’en doctrine, les auteurs décelent une constante, un critère invariable dans l’appréciation du rituel de l’acceptation en ligne. Cette analyse dépasse ainsi ces techniques apparues des usages, c’est-à-dire le « Box-Top », « Shrink-Wrap », « Browse-Wrap », « Click- Wrap », « Hybrid Click-Wrap », « Hyperwrap », et tente de définir et de circonscrire cette valeur, ce critère qui ins pire un retour aux fondements traditionnels du droit des contrats. Nous proposons, enfin, de recourir à des pictogrammes pour réaliser la mise en oeuvre de ce critère.
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This seminar paper considers whether OHADA - an experiment in unifying business law in African countries - has been a success. Following a prologue that explains the origins of the paper, the first part of the paper sets out basic information about the Organisation pour l’Harmonisation du Droit des Affaires en Afrique (“Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa,” known by the acronym OHADA). This part is followed by a review of law and development literature to assess the value of this literature for an evaluation of the success (or not) of OHADA. A third part then focuses on one specific uniform law, the law of secured transactions. The paper concludes that notwithstanding challenges the OHADA institutions exist and have produced uniform business laws for the formal business sector. Whether OHADA has been the cause of increased investment and trade requires studies that have not been carried out.
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In Europe and especially in France, the African business law landscape, as well as the legal discourse, for developing West African countries is almost exclusively dedicated to OHADA, the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa, created in 1993. While economic development in the Member States is the obvious underlying reason for the modernization and unification of African business law, the exact nature of such development remains uncertain, as does the manner in which a such result can or will be achieved. OHADA’s Uniform Acts are, with some minor exceptions, a carbon copy of French business law. The only goal is to increase international investment, which, in turn, is expected to generate economic development, but all without taking any notice of equality or social justice issues. That, without a doubt, is the reason why OHADA is constantly criticized as a law that benefits foreign investors, while remaining ineffective, even illusory, for local traders. To go beyond the criticism, the authors have decided to focus on the relationship between law and the informal sector and to draw lines between formal and informal rules in the business sector.
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Sous l’effet de des phénomènes de mutations dans les sociétés, on a assiste à une floraison de nouvelles activités ou de nouveaux instruments financiers. Concomitamment à cette prolifération de nouveaux produits ou techniques financières ; il est tout aussi apparu nécessaire d’adapter le secteur bancaire et financier de certains pays africains aux évolutions liées principalement aux nouveaux besoins de financement de leur économie nationale, à l’ouverture sur l’extérieur et aux opérations internationales et à l’introduction de l’innovation financière et technologique… Ceci est le cas pour le Maroc.
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La réforme du droit des sûretés en vue de le rendre plus attractif n’a pas suffisamment pris en compte la sécurité juridique de la caution illettrée. Elle a tout simplement confirmé la solution reprise au droit de certains pays de l’OHADA tels que le Sénégal, le Mali et la Guinée-Conakry. Pourtant, il apparaît possible de renforcer la protection de la caution en question. La révision des règles qui régissent la situation de celle-ci s’imposent.
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La protection des créanciers du vendeur de fonds de commerce s’inscrit dans un contexte global de la garantie de sécurité juridique et judiciaire que le législateur tente d’offrir aux investisseurs dans l'espace OHADA. Il vise à réaliser cet objectif par l’élaboration d’une règlementation appropriée en instituant des mesures de publicité ou d’exécution forcée de leurs droits de créance que le juge OHADA (gardien de la légalité et garant de la protection des droits individuels des justiciables) tente d’appliquer de manière effective. Business vendor’s creditor’s protection is in line with the general pattern of legal and judicial security guarantee that the legislator tries to offer to the investors in OHADA’s legislation space. To achieve its aim, the legislator draws up investors’ protection centered on regulation by taking steps consisting of advertisement measures or forced execution of investors’ claims and entrusts the guardian of legality and guarantor of justiciables’ individual rights protection, OHADA’s judge with the mission to check if these protective norms are efficient.
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Thématiques
- Droit communautaire, harmonisation, intégration (5)
- Commerce international (4)
- Droit commercial, droit des affaires (4)
- Droit des sociétés commerciales (4)
- Droit des coopératives (3)
- Droit des sûretés (3)
- Arbitrage, médiation, conciliation (2)
- Droit du travail & sécurité sociale (2)
- Droit financier, économique, bancaire (2)
- Droit processuel (2)
- Procédures collectives (2)
- Procédures simplifiées de recouvrement & voies d'exécution (2)
- Droit civil (1)
- Droit des investissements (1)
- Propriété intellectuelle, industrielle (1)
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