Finding a legal framework for transnational collective agreements through private international law

Authors
Publication date 2016
Series Amsterdam Law School Legal Studies research paper, 2016-12
Publisher Amsterdam: Centre for the Study of European Contract Law, University of Amsterdam
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL)
Abstract
The exact definition of transnational company agreements may be elusive, but agreements between representatives of workers and management that span more than one jurisdiction do exist is practice. They are a growing social phenomenon to which law must formulate an answer. This contribution looks at the legal status of transnational company agreements from the point of view of private international law: what happens when one of the parties to a transnational company agreement tries to enforce a TCA in a national court, claiming that the agreement is a binding contract with normative effect? Are the European Regulations Brussels I and Rome I applicable to disputes relating to transnational company agreements? Which court would have jurisdiction to hear such a case and which law would that court apply to the conflict? The analysis of the current rules leads to a list of six recommendations to social partners involved in transnational negotiations.
Document type Working paper
Note Centre for the Study of European Contract Law working paper no. 2016-02. - March 8, 2016. - Intended for publication in: Rethinking transnational collective bargaining / ed. K. Ahlberg.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2744595
Permalink to this page
Back