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Rome II and Tort Conflicts: A Missed Opportunity Abstract Contents

Rome II and Tort Conflicts: A Missed Opportunity Abstract Contents

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SYMEON C. SYMEONIDES ROME <strong>II</strong> AND TORT CONFLICTS<br />

26 (GEDIP). This proposal was an elegant, sophisticated, <strong>and</strong> flexible document which<br />

has influenced the general content <strong>and</strong> coverage of <strong>Rome</strong> <strong>II</strong>, although not where it<br />

matters most. In May 2002, the European Commission published a preliminary draft<br />

27 proposal <strong>and</strong> invited comments from the public. In addition to holding public<br />

hearings, the Commission received, <strong>and</strong> posted on the internet, more than eighty<br />

written commentaries from interested parties, including trade <strong>and</strong> industry groups,<br />

28<br />

professional organizations, governments, practitioners, <strong>and</strong> academics. Although<br />

the majority of the commentaries came from industry groups <strong>and</strong> tended to support<br />

the most regressive elements of the preliminary draft, the whole process is a good<br />

example of European democracy at work.<br />

29<br />

The Commission finalized its proposal on July 22, 2003. The proposal was<br />

accompanied by a detailed Explanatory Report (hereafter “Report”) <strong>and</strong> an article-byarticle<br />

commentary. This Report is the only complete explanation of the thinking<br />

underlying <strong>Rome</strong> <strong>II</strong> <strong>and</strong> it remains authoritative as to all of the remaining unamended<br />

provisions.<br />

The process then shifted to the European Parliament where the rapporteur,<br />

30<br />

British MEP Diana Wallis, continued to solicit feedback, especially from<br />

31<br />

academics. The rapporteur tried valiantly to inject some flexibility into the<br />

Commission’s proposal <strong>and</strong>, on July 6, 2005, she succeeded in having Parliament<br />

26. See Proposal for a European Convention on the Law Applicable to Non-contractual<br />

Obligations adopted at the Luxembourg meeting of Sept. 25-28, 1998, available at<br />

http://www.drt.ucl.ac.be/gedip/gedip-documents-8pe.html.<br />

27. See Preliminary Draft Proposal for a European Council Regulation on the Law Applicable to<br />

Non-Contractual Obligations, available at http://europa.eu.int/comm.justice_home/ unit/civil/consultation/I<br />

ndex_en.html [hereinafter Commission, Preliminary Draft Proposal].<br />

28. For a comprehensive academic proposal put forward during this period by the Hamburg Group<br />

of Private International Law, see Comments on the European Commission’s Draft Proposal for<br />

a European Council Regulation on the Law Applicable to Non-Contractual Obligations (Oct.<br />

10, 2002), 67 RABELSZ 1 (2003).<br />

29. See Commission of the European Communities, Proposal for a Regulation of the European<br />

Parliament <strong>and</strong> the Council on the Law Applicable to Non-Contractual Obligations, (COM<br />

427) (2003) final, 2003/0168(C)D), Brussels, (July 22, 2003) [hereinafter Commission<br />

Proposal]. For a critique of this proposal, see Symeon C. Symeonides, <strong>Tort</strong> <strong>Conflicts</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Rome</strong><br />

<strong>II</strong>; A View from Across, in FESTSCHRIFT FÜR ERIK JAYME 935 (H-P. Mansel, et al., eds. 2004).<br />

30. Ms. Wallis is currently the Vice President of the European Parliament <strong>and</strong> is the former leader<br />

of the Liberal Democrat European Parliamentary Party (LDEPP). She is an English solicitor<br />

who also studied law in Belgium, Germany, <strong>and</strong> Switzerl<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> is fluent in French <strong>and</strong><br />

German. For more information on her background <strong>and</strong> work in the European Parliament, see<br />

http://www.dianawallismep.org.uk/.<br />

31. In the interest of full disclosure, it should be noted that the undersigned author is one of the<br />

academics consulted by the rapporteur.<br />

56 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE LAW (2008) PAGE 6 OF 46

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