Abstract/Details

Multimodal carrier liability in the United States and Canada: Towards uniformity of applicable rules?

Katsivela, Maria-Eleftheria.   Universite de Montreal (Canada) ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  2004. NQ96359.

Abstract (summary)

From its inception, intermodal transport of goods has served trade, shippers and carriers, radically increasing transactions of goods worldwide. Multimodal carrier liability rules, however, have not evolved with the same rhythm and remain fragmented cross-modally and cross-country. This is also the case of the U.S. and Canada. The need to seek uniformity of applicable rules in these two countries led us to the comparative analysis of unimodal (land-ocean) rules in these two countries. Guided by past failed initiatives (1980 United Nations Convention on International Multimodal Transport), the European inter-nodal reality, transport deregulation, pragmatism, fairness in the relation between the carrier and the shipper and Law & Economics principles, we used harmonization, codification and contractualism in advancing our suggestions on uniform multimodal carrier liability rules.

Indexing (details)


Business indexing term
Subject
Transportation;
International relations
Classification
0709: Transportation
Identifier / keyword
Social sciences; Carrier liability; Codification; Contractualism; Harmonization; Liability; Multimodal carrier
Title
Multimodal carrier liability in the United States and Canada: Towards uniformity of applicable rules?
Author
Katsivela, Maria-Eleftheria
Number of pages
594
Degree date
2004
School code
0992
Source
DAI-A 65/10, Dissertation Abstracts International
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
ISBN
978-0-612-96359-7
Advisor
Lefebvre, Guy; Tassel, Yves
University/institution
Universite de Montreal (Canada)
University location
Canada -- Quebec, CA
Degree
LL.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
NQ96359
ProQuest document ID
305053203
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/305053203