
This book is the third volume in the Oxford International and Comparative Insolvency Law Series. It addresses one of the critical issues of any insolvency by providing comprehensive analysis of the law and practice in relation to creditor claims. As with the two previous volumes in the series the book provides a comparative view by setting out the relevant law and practice in over 20 jurisdictions drawing out the divergences and common features of domestic insolvency laws from a broad spectrum of countries. Areas covered include submission of claims, verification and admission of claims, ranking of insolvency and administration claims, treatment of non-enforceable claims, and voting and participation rights. Quality, uniformity and the high level of detail of National Reports are the key benefits of this volume. The book assists practitioners in assessing which ranking and participation rights could be asserted by the various types of creditors in the jurisdictions covered. For scholars it provides access to a wealth of information which is currently not accessible in English.
This volume investigates the complex legal frameworks governing the ranking and priority of creditor claims within insolvency proceedings across diverse international jurisdictions. The authors, a team of legal scholars and practitioners, utilize a comparative methodology to synthesize national reports from over 20 countries. By examining the divergence and commonality in domestic insolvency laws, the text provides a structured framework for understanding how different legal systems manage the hierarchy of debt repayment and creditor participation rights.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal practitioners and scholars frequently cite this work as a foundational reference for cross-border insolvency research due to its high level of detail and uniformity. Experts highlight the text as a primary resource for accessing comparative data that is otherwise difficult to obtain in English-language legal literature.
Page Count:
688
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191040746
ISBN-13:
9780191040740
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