The special legal regulation of relationships between companies and individuals, based primarily on the legislative activities of the European Union in the recent decades, has radically transformed the classic law of contracts. The provisions of special consumer legislation (ZVPot, ZPotK-1, ZVKSES, ZVPNPP, ZIsRPS) take precedence over the general rules of the Code of Obligations, differing from them significantly. Specific consumer rights apply to contractual and non-contractual relationships and to rules of procedure, so they are used every day. In the monograph, the authors examine the current situation of the Slovenian and European consumer law and analyse the consequences of the application of special rules in the fields where outstanding issues arise.
COBISS.SI-ID: 281553408
EU consumer protection directives, Commission recommendations, and different EU consumer programmes provide for encouragement and in certain fields already for an obligation of establishment of voluntary out-of-court settlement and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms and procedures (ADR). The cost risk of litigation in ordinary courts of law is usually not proportionate to the economic value of a typical consumer claim. Besides, a typical feature of a consumer dispute is the existence of a factual inequality between the trader and the consumer with regard to, inter alia, experience in handling of disputes, with regard to access to legal advice and funding of litigation. Therefore a lack of an appropriate ADR schemes for consumer disputes in reality often means that access to justice for consumer is frustrated.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14783825
The reform of the Brussels I Regulation brought some changes also concerning jurisdiction in consumer, labour and insurance disputes. Thereby, procedural protection of typically weaker parties shall be brought to a higher level. The most important changes relate to the extension of scope of the Regulation's applicability against third-state defendants and to restriction of the possibility that jurisdiction by submission is acquired to the detriment of the weaker party.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14769489
The chapter in the monograph analyses the legal protection of consumers in Slovenia, which in view of the fact that the European Union regulates important parts of consumer law, reflects the content of the European directives. The author analyses their integration into the Slovenian legislation and highlights the weaknesses of both the implementation and the practical enforcement of consumer legislation in our country.
COBISS.SI-ID: 13929553
Online gambling is the fastest growing service in the EU, with an annual growth rate of 15% and estimated 2015 revenues of 13 billion EUR. With the development of new technologies, especially the Internet, gambling has acquired a huge market, so that today online gambling is accessible to ordinary consumers of all segments of the population. With the availability, or better yet intrusion, of gambling into the homes of consumers, online gambling has been characterized as normal, acceptable and morally uncontested. However, gambling is not only fun, but also a source of various risks, for example addiction, fraud, money laundering, etc. It is these very risks of (online) gambling that cause a need for strict legal regulation of gambling in individual countries. The aim of this article is to present legal regimes of online gambling in the EU Member States through the prism of the judgments of the Court of Justice of the European Union and the principles of the internal market with the application to the Slovenian regulation of online gaming, with a focus on issues arising from the implementation of the national legislation relating to the Internet.
COBISS.SI-ID: 13742417