The constitution of the conflict of laws

Bomhoff, J.ORCID logo (2014). The constitution of the conflict of laws. In Watt, H. M. & Arroyo, D. F. (Eds.), Private International Law and Global Governance (pp. 262 - 276). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198727620.003.0014
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Private international law doctrines are often portrayed as natural, largely immutable, boundaries on local public agency in a transnational private world. Challenging this problematic conception requires a reimagining of the field, not only as a species of public law or an instrument of governance, but as a constitutional phenomenon. This chapter investigates what such a ‘constitution of the conflict of laws’ could look like. Two features are given special emphasis. First: the idea of the conflict of laws as an independent source of constitutionalist normativity, rather than as a mere passive receptacle for constraints imposed by classical liberal constitutional law. And second: the possibility of a local, ‘outward-looking’ form of conflicts constitutionalism to complement more familiar, inwardly focused, federalist conceptions.

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