Alexandra Braun, ‘Testamentary responsibility’

INTRODUCTION
… The aim of this article is to challenge these perceptions and related assumptions and to question testamentary freedom as the self-evident organising principle of modern succession law. Its purpose is to bring into sharper focus another important value of succession law: ‘responsibility’. While we speak of responsibility in other areas of private law (as eg in delict and tort), and we tend to assume that responsibility is a function of public rather than private law, this article argues that it is important to acknowledge and appreciate responsibility as an underpinning value of succession law including of testate succession. Hence my title: ‘testamentary responsibility’.

By saying that a testator has testamentary responsibility, I am not suggesting that testamentary freedom is morally suspect or that it should be abolished. Neither am I saying that a person’s assets should automatically go to her family or the state or crown. Rather, my aim is to re-orient the debate towards ‘responsibility’ as the starting point for theorising succession law and to show that responsibility is compatible with, and indeed intrinsic to, the exercise of testamentary freedom …

€ (Westlaw)

Alexandra Braun, ‘Testamentary responsibility’, (2024) 28(3) Edinburgh Law Review 325-355.

‘Private Law Fairness between Generations?’

Distributive justice is an essential element of social justice. When discussing distributive justice in private law, one important question is: a fair distribution between whom? For example, is a consumer protection instrument that strengthens the position of societally strong consumers, but is less important for weak ones (like much of the information paradigm), ‘social’? The answer is not self-evident. A particular theme in the analysis of patterns of distributive justice is the relation between generations … (more)

[Thomas Wilhelmsson, Transformative Private Law Blog, 21 October 2024]

‘Digital Vulnerability as a Tool for Social Justice in European Private Law’

In recent decades, the concept of vulnerability has emerged in many post-industrial societies to signify the growing fragility of human beings, economies, infrastructures, and ecosystems in the contemporary world. The notion of ‘vulnerable subject’, in particular, has become a powerful and dynamic concept that explains how all individuals, including those who do not belong to traditionally protected categories, are universally vulnerable due both to their physical bodies and their inevitable dependence on social relationships and institutions (MA Fineman, 2008) … (more)

[Camilla Crea and Marta Infantino, Transformative Private Law Blog, 21 October 2024]

‘Reconceptualising the Social Dimension of Business Freedoms through a Fundamental Rights Lens’

The balancing of economic and social rights and interests has provoked an almost perennial discussion within the context of the deepening and widening of European Union (EU) integration. In my forthcoming monograph, Business Freedoms and Fundamental Rights in European Union Law (OUP 2024), I explore further the fundamental rights implications of this debate, with an emphasis on the freedom to conduct a business as a fundamental right, not in isolation, but rather within its wider constitutional and fundamental (social) rights context. I argue that there are underexplored ‘social’ dimensions to business freedoms as fundamental rights within EU law … (more)

[Niall O’Connor, Transformative Private Law Blog, 21 October 2024]

Hilary Young, ‘Disentangling “Informed Consent”’

ABSTRACT
The legal concept of ‘informed consent’ to medical treatment is often confusing to students and lawyers alike. This is in part because there is no single legal concept of informed consent. In law, the term relates to two different legal obligations. One is the fundamental and general obligation not to touch people without their consent. The other is an obligation specific to health practitioners to provide their patients with relevant information. Using the term ‘informed consent’ to refer to either is misleading because it suggests the need, within a single legal rule, for both information and permission. However, depending on which legal obligation is at issue, only one of information and permission is likely to be relevant. This article disentangles the meanings of ‘informed consent’ to help people better understand the relevant law. But the issue isn’t only one of doctrinal clarity: there are potential and actual negative consequences of confusing the issues, and these are explored. Thus, while the term ‘informed consent’ is likely to remain ingrained, it is important to understand which obligation is at issue in a given case so that the law can be applied and developed in a way that protects the relevant interests at stake.

Young, Hilary, Disentangling ‘Informed Consent’ (August 1, 2024).

Clare Williams, ‘Ability Capitalism: Law’s Constitutive Role in Constructing Disability’

ABSTRACT
In proposing a theory of ability capitalism, this paper considers how, where, when, and why law plays a constitutive role in labour market constructions of disability. In problematising typical or mainstream accounts that see markets as ‘natural’ social orderings, the paper suggests a constitutive economic sociology of law lens that shifts beyond the embeddedness metaphor to focus on feedback loops. Such an approach can highlight the market’s legal priors as well as the ways in which economic and legal phenomena are iteratively re-co-constituted at market boundaries. It can also highlight the role of legal predistribution and processes of commodification in the construction of disability as a market rationality. Through the commodification of labour-power, the law makes visible standard employment relations whilst rendering non-standard relations, preferences, assumptions and norms – typically those reflecting disabled people’s experiences – invisible. Thus, the paper extends historical materialist accounts of the construction of disability, explaining how and why rights-based narratives are not, and cannot be the sole response to market-generated exclusions, disadvantages, and inequalities. A cornerstone of equality legislation, the reasonable adjustment, offers a case study of natural market narratives in action and how law demurs to underlying efficiency calculations that determine a disabled worker’s inclusion in labour markets. While mainstream, natural market narratives assume rights to be a function of efficiency, a constitutive lens reveals efficiency to be a function of (predistributed) rights. This indicates additional sites at which the law constructs disability disadvantage, suggesting alternative pathways to its challenge. The theoretical contributions set out here are explored in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic’s normalisation of remote working and the resulting radical inclusion gains for disabled communities. The paper queries whether shifts in background labour market norms – where and when work tasks are carried out – might adjust some of the assumptions that feed into the efficiency calculations underlying the reasonable adjustment of remote working. If so, the prefiguration of alternative market practices suggests an additional way of challenging entrenched inequalities such as the intractable disability employment and pay gaps.

Clare Williams, Ability Capitalism: Law’s Constitutive Role in Constructing Disability, Industrial Law Journal. Published: 18 October 2024.

Jovana Cicmil, ‘Consumer rights protection and prohibition of unfair business practices with the aim of improving consumer needs and demands satisfaction’

ABSTRACT
A characteristic feature of contemporary business and current trends in the market economy is primarily globalization, which has significantly enhanced the possibilities for expanding operations from one market to multiple markets, while simultaneously increasing competitiveness among business entities. Consumer protection in developed market economies is not a new topic; however, under the conditions of globalization, the transition processes of the economy in certain countries, and competitive relations in modern economic flows, this issue has attracted significant attention from the scientific and professional community in recent years. After the introductory section, this paper reviews the concept and significance of consumer satisfaction, specifically addressing the meeting of consumer needs and demands as an economically significant category essential for modern business practices. Furthermore, the paper focuses on the legal provisions related to consumer rights protection and the prohibition of unfair business practices. The concept of consumer protection is safeguarded by the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia, while consumer rights protection and the prohibition of unfair business practices are primarily regulated by the Law on Consumer Protection and the Consumer Protection Strategy for 2019-2024.

Jovana Cicmil, Consumer rights protection and prohibition of unfair business practices with the aim of improving consumer needs and demands satisfaction, Pravo – Teorija I Praksa, 41(3), 156-169 (2024). Published 19 October 2024.

Douglas and Ojelabi, ‘Civil Dispute Resolution in Australia: a Content Analysis of the Teaching of the Topic of ADR in the Core Legal Curriculum’

ABSTRACT
This article describes a research project exploring the diverse ways that Australian law schools offer alternative or appropriate dispute resolution (‘ADR’) as part of the core curriculum. Since an amendment to the ‘Priestley 11’ required areas of study for admission to practice, ADR is now a topic in the renamed area of Civil Dispute Resolution (formerly known as Civil Procedure). This article reports on a research project that uses content analysis to map and explore the provision of ADR core education in Australia. Our research shows most universities combined ADR into the teaching of Civil Procedure and gave less focus to ADR than civil procedure. A significant number of law programs used the term Civil Dispute Resolution, indicating an adoption of the Priestley 11 approach to this study area. The data shows a trend to integrate the two areas of ADR and civil procedure which resonates with a vocational view of legal education and recognises the mainstreaming of ADR in dealing with disputes.

Douglas, Kathy and Ojelabi, Lola Akin, Civil Dispute Resolution in Australia: a Content Analysis of the Teaching of the Topic of ADR in the Core Legal Curriculum (2024) 45(2) Adelaide Law Review 339.

Juan Diaz-Granados, ‘Exclusive Possession, “contractualisation” and the Lease-Licence Dichotomy: a Reconsideration of Legal Categorisation in the Airbnb Era’

ABSTRACT
Airbnb is one of the most disruptive companies in the ‘Sharing Economy’. Its business model is built upon a triangular structure of legal relationships that remains poorly understood and inadequately analysed in terms of legal classification. This article examines the issue of legal categorisation vis-à-vis the relationship between the Airbnb host and the Airbnb guest. Focusing on the common law distinction between leases and licences, this article re-evaluates the analysis of the lease-licence dichotomy in the context of Airbnb. It argues that the elements of possession — physical control (factum possessionis) and relevant intention (animus possidendi) — should be considered in the lease-license analysis. With this normative claim, this article concludes that contrary to the decision in Swan v Uecker, the contractual arrangement between the Airbnb host and the Airbnb guest should be categorised as a licence relationship, rather than a lease.

diaz-Granados, Juan, Exclusive Possession, ‘contractualisation’ and the Lease-Licence Dichotomy: a Reconsideration of Legal Categorisation in the Airbnb Era (2024) 45(2) Adelaide Law Review 250.

Giuffrida and Treece, ‘Keeping AI Under Observation: Anticipated Impacts on Physicians’ Standard of Care’

ABSTRACT
As Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools become increasingly present across industries, concerns have started to emerge as to their impact on professional liability. Specifically, for the medical industry-in many ways an inherently ‘risky’ business-hospitals and physicians have begun evaluating the impact of AI tools on their professional malpractice risk. This Essay seeks to address that question, zooming in on how AI may affect physicians’ standard of care for medical malpractice claims.

Giuffrida, Iria and Treece, Taylor, Keeping AI Under Observation: Anticipated Impacts on Physicians’ Standard of Care (March 1, 2020).