Arnaud Nuyts

Free University of Brussels (ULB)
Professor ULB (Brussels)

Arnaud Nuyts specialises in international business law, notably the law of international commercial litigation and arbitration and international contract law. He is a professor at the University of Brussels, where he lectures on International Litigation and International Contracts, Comparative Conflicts of Laws, and the International Law of Electronic Commerce and Intellectual Property. He is also a director of the Masters in International Business Law at the same University and a professor at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, where he teaches the private international law course for the Masters in International and Comparative Law (taught in English). Arnaud Nuyts holds a law degree and a doctor of laws from the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). He also holds a masters (LL.M.) from the University of Cambridge (UK) and has studied at Columbia and Harvard Universities (USA). Arnaud Nuyts is the author of various publications in the fields of international litigation, international contracts, distribution law and international arbitration. He is a Member of the Bar of Brussels. After stays in England and the United States, including working for a major business law firm in New York, he is currently working with Liedekerke Wolters Waelbroeck Kirkpatrick.

Linked authors

Free University of Brussels (ULB)
Free University of Brussels (ULB)
Free University of Brussels (ULB)
Free University of Brussels (ULB)
Free University of Brussels (ULB)

Articles

7230 Review

Alain Ménéménis, Arnaud Nuyts, Catherine Kessedjian, Catherine Prieto, Christophe Lapp, Claire Favre, Denis Mazeaud, Emmanuelle Claudel, Frederic Jenny, Hélène Gaudemet-Tallon, Jean-Louis Fourgoux, Jean-Marc Kiviatkowski, Joelle Simon, Laurence Idot, Louis Vogel, Marie-Laure Niboyet, Michael Wilderspin, Rainer Becker, Soraya Amrani-Mekki, Yves Gaudemet Conference: The EC White Book on competition private enforcement (Paris, 13 06 2008)

7230

Whereas in the enforcement system of Articles 81 and 82 EC resulting from Regulation No 17/62, it was usual to distinguish between the application of these texts, on the one hand, by the Commission and, on the other hand, by the national authorities and courts, which led to a preference for a (...)

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7230
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7230
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Number of contributions

Author's ranking
4957th
In number of contributions
1368th
In number of visits
149th
In average number of visits
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