02063nam a22003258a 4500001001600000003000700016005001700023006001900040007001500059008004100074020002600115020002900141040002400170050002300194082001700217245014100234246008100375264005200456300005900508336002600567337002600593338003600619500007300655520078700728650003501515650002901550700005201579776003501631856007101666CR9780511667503UkCbUP20180107143411.0m|||||o||d||||||||cr||||||||||||091223s2011||||enk s ||1 0|eng|d a9780511667503 (ebook) z9780521197892 (hardback) aUkCbUPcUkCbUPerda00aK845.S7 bB65 201100a346.02/222200aBoilerplate Clauses, International Commercial Contracts and the Applicable Law / [electronic resource]cEdited by Giuditta Cordero-Moss.3 aBoilerplate Clauses, International Commercial Contracts & the Applicable Law 1aCambridge :bCambridge University Press,c2011. a1 online resource (426 pages) :bdigital, PDF file(s). atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aTitle from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 09 Oct 2015). aWith the aim of creating an autonomous regime for the interpretation and application of the contract, boilerplate clauses are often inserted into international commercial contracts without negotiations or regard for their legal effects. The assumption that a sufficiently detailed and clear language will ensure that the legal effects of the contract will only be based on the contract, as opposed to the applicable law, was originally encouraged by English courts, and today most international contracts have these clauses, irrespective of the governing law. This collection of essays demonstrates that this assumption is not fully applicable under systems of civil law, because these systems are based on principles, such as good faith and loyalty, which contradict this approach. 0aStandardized terms of contract 0aForeign trade regulation1 aCordero-Moss, Giuditta,eeditor of compilation.08iPrint version: z978052119789240uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511667503zCambridge Books Online