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Osama Ismail Mohammad Amayreh, Yousef Mohammad Shandi, Pardis Moslemzadeh Tehrani, Izura Masdina Mohamed Zakri
Business Law Review
Volume 40, Issue 5 (2019) pp. 203 – 216
https://doi.org/10.54648/bula2019027
Abstract
The UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts (PICC) have a significant effect on the legal impact of changed circumstances. Many recent court and arbitral decisions have relied on the PICC when ruling on issues relating to hardship events, as a result of the occurrence of events fundamentally altering the equilibrium of the contract either because the cost of a party’s performance has increased or because the value of the performance a party receives has diminished, which is widely known in international trade as hardship clauses. This was not the case only for court and arbitral decisions, as many directives and principles did, as well, such as Article 6:111 of the Principles of European Contract Law, Article 89 of the Common European Sales Law, and Article 1195 of the Amended French Civil Code of 2016. In this context, this article analyses the role of hardship provisions in light of the PICC in retaining economic equilibrium compared with the contingency-unforeseen circumstances theory in the Palestinian Draft Civil Code Draft (PDCC) in order to reach a place of harmony. On the one hand, the research concluded that the hardship theory as contained in the UNIDROIT Principles of 2016 suits the current Palestinian reality, however, the criterion for determining the fundamental alteration of the contractual equilibrium is tainted in ambiguity. On the other hand, the research shows failure of the contingency-unforeseen circumstances theory in the PDCC in addressing changed circumstances and onerous performance, which necessitates an urgent intervention of the Palestinian legislature to amend the text of Article 151. Accordingly, in light of the current wording of Article 151 of the PDCC, the study shows that Palestinian contracting parties cannot refer to the Unified Principles of International Trade Contracts 2016 to fill the legislative vacuum in cases of changed circumstances, because it is not possible to agree on anything contrary to the provisions of the contingency-unforeseen circumstances theory.
Extract
Most of the academic research on the developments of EU Justice and Home Affairs (EU JHA) tends to overlook the role played by technologies in their relations with classical 'human' and institutional actors. This is particularly problematic because in official discourses, technologies are requested, designed, and built as cornerstones of European security and its external dimension. Still, apart from 'technicalities', their use and design are generally assumed as politics-free. On the contrary, this contribution brings technologies to the forefront of the research and reframes them in terms of socio-technical assemblages. From this perspective, it analyses the role of the 2011 EU Passenger Name Record project in the making of European security and its external dimension. The lesson learned is that human institutions are neither the only players nor the passive victims of technological determinisms. Rather, focusing on a socio-technical assemblage means to inquire the effective participation of different actors and thus critically discuss the making of European security in terms of politics.
European Foreign Affairs Review