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This book offers the analysis of the relationship between the Cape Town Convention and national laws on secured transactions. The first part of the book considers why national implementation is so important in the case of the Cape Town Convention and identifies how innovative the Convention is as a uniform law instrument. The second part includes chapters on those states that are Parties to the Cape Town Convention, which analyse how the Convention is implemented under the domestic law. The third part includes chapters on those states that are not Parties to the Convention, which compare their national laws and the Convention to find unique features of the Cape Town Convention’s rules. The fourth part discusses the meaning of Protocols on aircraft, railway rolling stock and space assets from the practitioner’s point of view. As a whole, the book offers insights into the new stage of uniform private law and shows the need for further examination of the subject, which will be essential for international and national legislators, academics of comparative and international private law as well as practitioners who are the users of the uniform law regime.
Law. --- Civil law. --- Private international law. --- Conflict of laws. --- International law. --- Comparative law. --- Public finance. --- Law of the sea. --- Macroeconomics. --- Law and economics. --- Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law. --- Law and Economics. --- Law of the Sea, Air and Outer Space. --- Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics. --- Civil Law. --- Financial Law/Fiscal Law. --- Security (Law) --- Collateral security --- Secured transactions --- Commercial law --- Debtor and creditor --- Private International Law, International & Foreign Law, Comparative Law . --- Cameralistics --- Public finance --- Currency question --- Law, Civil --- Private law --- Roman law --- Economics --- Economics and jurisprudence --- Economics and law --- Jurisprudence and economics --- Jurisprudence --- Public finances --- Law of nations --- Nations, Law of --- Public international law --- Law --- High seas, Jurisdiction over --- Marine law --- Ocean --- Ocean law --- Sea, Law of the --- International law --- Maritime law --- Territorial waters --- Choice of law --- Conflict of laws --- Intermunicipal law --- International law, Private --- International private law --- Private international law --- Legal polycentricity --- Law and legislation --- Civil law
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This book offers the analysis of the relationship between the Cape Town Convention and national laws on secured transactions. The first part of the book considers why national implementation is so important in the case of the Cape Town Convention and identifies how innovative the Convention is as a uniform law instrument. The second part includes chapters on those states that are Parties to the Cape Town Convention, which analyse how the Convention is implemented under the domestic law. The third part includes chapters on those states that are not Parties to the Convention, which compare their national laws and the Convention to find unique features of the Cape Town Convention’s rules. The fourth part discusses the meaning of Protocols on aircraft, railway rolling stock and space assets from the practitioner’s point of view. As a whole, the book offers insights into the new stage of uniform private law and shows the need for further examination of the subject, which will be essential for international and national legislators, academics of comparative and international private law as well as practitioners who are the users of the uniform law regime.
Macroeconomics --- Public finance --- International private law --- Financial law --- Transport law --- Commercial law. Economic law (general) --- Private law --- economisch recht --- macro-economie --- burgerlijk recht --- internationaal privaatrecht --- overheidsfinanciën --- zeerecht --- financieel recht
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This is the first book to report the details of the current status of interfirm relationships in Japan. Based on a unique data set of firms, the authors describe the characteristics of interfirm transactions in a manner unprecedented in the literature. Special emphasis is placed on the nature of payment/collection between firms. Payment for interfirm transactions is usually made on account, or by payment after delivery, rather than by immediate payment. Thus, most interfirm transactions are accompanied by a provision of credit (i.e., lending/borrowing) from a seller to a buyer, referred to as trade credit. Although trade credit is used all around the world and accounts for a large portion of firms’ balance sheets, researchers, lacking detailed data, have long encountered serious difficulty in clarifying how and why firms use trade credit. In this work the authors use a huge, unique data set of about 380,000 firms in Japan during the 2007–2010 period. To grasp the entirety of this enormous data set, which is tantamount to a picture of all firms currently operating in Japan, this brief summarizes descriptive statistics and conducts univariate analyses of the data. Also provided is the legal background of trade credit practice in Japan from the “law and economics” perspective. In this manner, the book furnishes vital information that can be used as a reference for future theoretical and empirical analyses of trade credit and interfirm relationships.
Economics/Management Science. --- Finance/Investment/Banking. --- Business Strategy/Leadership. --- Production/Logistics/Supply Chain Management. --- Economics. --- Economie politique --- Business networks -- Japan -- Databases. --- Commercial credit -- Japan. --- Corporations -- Finance. --- Economics -- Japan. --- Business networks --- Commercial credit --- Finance --- Business & Economics --- Banking --- Investment & Speculation --- Finance - General --- Databases --- Business enterprises --- Finance. --- Leadership. --- Production management. --- Finance, general. --- Operations Management. --- Manufacturing management --- Industrial management --- Ability --- Command of troops --- Followership --- Funding --- Funds --- Economics --- Currency question --- Japan. --- al-Yābān --- Giappone --- Government of Japan --- Iapōnia --- I͡Aponii͡ --- Japam --- Japani --- Japão --- Japon --- Japonia --- Japonsko --- Japonya --- Jih-pen --- Mư̄ang Yīpun --- Nihon --- Nihonkoku --- Nippon --- Nippon-koku --- Nipponkoku --- Prathēt Yīpun --- Riben --- State of Japan --- Yābān --- Yapan --- Yīpun --- Zhāpān
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This is the first book to report the details of the current status of interfirm relationships in Japan. Based on a unique data set of firms, the authors describe the characteristics of interfirm transactions in a manner unprecedented in the literature. Special emphasis is placed on the nature of payment/collection between firms. Payment for interfirm transactions is usually made on account, or by payment after delivery, rather than by immediate payment. Thus, most interfirm transactions are accompanied by a provision of credit (i.e., lending/borrowing) from a seller to a buyer, referred to as trade credit. Although trade credit is used all around the world and accounts for a large portion of firms’ balance sheets, researchers, lacking detailed data, have long encountered serious difficulty in clarifying how and why firms use trade credit. In this work the authors use a huge, unique data set of about 380,000 firms in Japan during the 2007–2010 period. To grasp the entirety of this enormous data set, which is tantamount to a picture of all firms currently operating in Japan, this brief summarizes descriptive statistics and conducts univariate analyses of the data. Also provided is the legal background of trade credit practice in Japan from the “law and economics” perspective. In this manner, the book furnishes vital information that can be used as a reference for future theoretical and empirical analyses of trade credit and interfirm relationships.
Social psychology --- Finance --- Business policy --- Personnel management --- Production management --- Computer. Automation --- financieel management --- B2B (business-to-business) --- management --- leidinggeven --- productie --- sociale interventies --- strategisch beleid
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