Law made for man: Trevor Hartley and the making of a "modern approach" in European and private international law

Bomhoff, J.ORCID logo (2025). Law made for man: Trevor Hartley and the making of a "modern approach" in European and private international law. Journal of Private International Law, 20(3), 522 - 538. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441048.2024.2436232
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This article offers an overview and an interpretation of Trevor Hartley’s scholarship in the fields of private international law and EU law. It argues that Hartley’s work, beginning in the mid-1960s and spanning almost six decades, shows striking affinities with two broader outlooks and genres of legal discourse that have roots in this same period. These can be found, firstly, in the approach of senior English judges committed to “internationalising” the conflict of laws in the post-war era; and, secondly, in the so-called “legal process” current of scholarship that was especially influential in American law schools from the late 1950s onwards. Reading Hartley’s writings against these backgrounds can help illuminate, and perhaps to some small extent complicate, two labels he himself has given to his own work: of a “modern approach”, in which “law is made for man, not man for the law”.

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