Finding a legal framework for transnational collective agreements through private international law
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| Publication date | 2016 |
| Series | Amsterdam Law School Legal Studies research paper, 2016-12 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam: Centre for the Study of European Contract Law, University of Amsterdam |
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| Abstract |
The exact definition of transnational company agreements may be elusive, but agreements between representatives of workers and management that span more than one jurisdiction do exist is practice. They are a growing social phenomenon to which law must formulate an answer. This contribution looks at the legal status of transnational company agreements from the point of view of private international law: what happens when one of the parties to a transnational company agreement tries to enforce a TCA in a national court, claiming that the agreement is a binding contract with normative effect? Are the European Regulations Brussels I and Rome I applicable to disputes relating to transnational company agreements? Which court would have jurisdiction to hear such a case and which law would that court apply to the conflict? The analysis of the current rules leads to a list of six recommendations to social partners involved in transnational negotiations.
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| Document type | Working paper |
| Note | Centre for the Study of European Contract Law working paper no. 2016-02. - March 8, 2016. - Intended for publication in: Rethinking transnational collective bargaining / ed. K. Ahlberg. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2744595 |
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