Organisations
Department of Procedural law, arbitration and private international law Ghent University
Institute of Private International Law KU Leuven
Research topics of this unit are:
• Private International Law
• International commercial law
• Right of the World Trade Organization
• International and European environmental law
• European economic law
.
Private Law Vrije Universiteit Brussel
The Department for Private Law (PRIR) consists of a few full-time members (professors and research assistants) and a large number of part-time members. Regarding the list of research topics below it should be noted that various sub-divisions of certain areas of the law are being researched by more than one researcher, which is not reflected in the present summary, and that research by part-time members is not completely reproduced for lack of ...
Private and Economic Law Vrije Universiteit Brussel
The department PREC unites the groups of Economic and Private Law (including Notary Law) and carries out education and conducts research in these domains.
Institute for Contract Law KU Leuven
It is responsible for the teaching of Specific Contracts and research in the field of contract law.
Institute for Administrative Law KU Leuven
The research line administrative law builds upon the work of prof. dr. Louis-Paul Suetens (who created the former Institute for administrative law in 1965) and prof. dr. Marc Boes. The focus of the research is administrative law in a broad sense, with a special interest for the blurred line between public and privae law and the multi layered government. The main topics of the research are: lawful government actions; government contracts; ...
Institute for Insurance Law KU Leuven
The research topics are insurance law, European insurance regulations, private international law regarding insurance and additional social insurance.
Faculty of Law and Criminology Ghent University
Division for Roman Law and Legal History KU Leuven
Legal history provides the key to understanding the differences and similarities that underlie contemporary legal systems. Seeing laws in their historical context stimulates academics and clinical professionals to think creatively about how they can shape the law of the future.