The Public Law/Private Law Divide: Une entente assez cordiale
By (Author) Mark R Freedland
Edited by Jean-Bernard Auby
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
1st March 2006
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
342
Hardback
270
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 21mm
The contributions brought together in this book derive from joint seminars, held by scholars between colleagues from the University of Oxford and the University of Paris II. Their starting point is the original divergence between the two jurisdictions, with the initial rejection of the public-private divide in English Law, but on the other hand its total acceptance as natural in French Law. Then, they go on to demonstrate that the two systems have converged, the British one towards a certain degree of acceptance of the division, the French one towards a growing questioning of it. However this is not the only part of the story, since both visions are now commonly coloured and affected by European Law and by globalisation, which introduces new tensions into our legal understanding of what is "public" and what is "private".
Such an in-depth study of the relevance of the public-private divide in both legal systems can only be fruitful...it reveals a great potential for lesson learning and allows for a deeper understanding of each system. -- Sophie Boyron * Public Law *
Mark Freedland is Professor of Employment Law and Tutorial Fellow of St John's College, Oxford. Jean-Bernard Auby is professeur de droit public at the Universit Panthon-Assas (Paris II)