Michele Cozzio
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Diritto privato e antitrust dell'Unione Europea |
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Department: Faculty of Law
Holders: Gian Antonio Benacchio
Professors: Michele Carpagnano, Michele Cozzio
Abstract:
The course aims to make the student aware of the increasingly important role and influence of European Union law on the civil and commercial law of Member States. The course also aims to make the students aware of the mechanisms through which harmonization and unification of private law take place I the European Union and make them aware of the ways and means by which our legal system evolves in the community. At the end of the course, the student will be able to evaluate the effects on the Italian system of goals, instruments and solutions prepared by European law. In particular, it is expected that the student will demonstrate the ability to: - to analyze the mechanisms of the process of Europeanization and harmonization of national law, that is to say the contents, tools and effects of the phases of harmonization, uniformization and unification; - to identify the role of institutional actors involved in the process of Europeanization and harmonization and, more generally, in the process of circulating legal models; - to have a critical reading of the operating rules, both positive and jurisdictional, in specific areas (for example: consumer contracts, producer responsibility, competition and antitrust rules); - to evaluate the effects of the process of Europeanization and harmonization of national law, with particular reference to the hypotheses of transforming the source system, forced abandonment of previous and consolidated principles, innovation of the meaning and content of internal rules.
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Sistemi giuridici comparati (PZ) |
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Department: Faculty of Law
Holders: Andrea Pradi
Professors: Massimo Santaroni, Michele Cozzio
Abstract: "The aims of the course are to offer students an introduction to the main legal systems of the world and to equip them with methodologies and instruments of comparative law.
At the end of the course students will be able to:
- identify the main features of a legal system and of the various families of legal systems;
- acquire skills aimed at placing the main systems of the Western legal tradition in a current, European and global perspective;
- acquire an adequate understanding of the characteristics and systemological placement of some families of ""non-Western"" legal systems, based on different conceptions of the social order and law;
- identify the characteristics and the different methods of comparative law as a science: functionalism, structuralism and other epistemological paradigms of more recent definition;
- identify the key elements of an institute which are relevant for uncovering its function and compare it with a similar model (functionalism); identify the different formants and evaluate their convergence or dissociation (structuralism) with regard to a specific factual situation."
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