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COVID-19 Apps, Corona Vaccination Apps and Data 'Ownership'
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All Good Things Come to an End, but Access Remains
In: Sjef van Erp, All good things come to an end, but access remains (Wolf Legal Publishers, Oisterwijk, Netherlands, 2021)
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Management as Ownership of Data
In: Sjef van Erp, Management as Ownership of Data, in: Sebastian Lohsse, Reiner Schulze and Dirk Staudenmayer (eds.), Data as Counter-Performance: Contract Law 2.0? (Hart/Nomos, Forthcoming)
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Working paper
Land Registration and 'Disruptive' (or 'Trustworthy'?) Technologies: Tokenisation of Immovable Property
In: Sjef van Erp, Land registration and "disruptive" (or "trustworthy"?) technologies: Tokenisation of immovable property, in: Anabel Fraga, Elena Ioriatti and Sjef van Erp (eds.), IMOLA II Project. The European Land Register Document (ELRD): A common Semantic Model for Land Registers Interconnection
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Ownership of Digital Assets and the Numerus Clausus of Legal Objects
In: Maastricht European Private Law Institute Working Paper No. 2017/6
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Working paper
Security Interests Burdening Transport Vehicles: The Cape Town Convention on International Interests in Mobile Equipment and its Implementation in the Netherlands and on the Dutch Caribbean Islands
In: MAASTRICHT EUROPEAN PRIVATE LAW INSTITUTE WORKING PAPER No. 2015/4
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Working paper
Contract and Property Law: Distinct, but not Separate
In: European review of contract law: ERCL, Band 9, Heft 4
ISSN: 1614-9939
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Working paper
Contract and Property Law: Distinct, but not Separate
In: MEPLI Working Paper Series 2013-14
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Working paper
A Case Note from a Dutch Perspective
In: European Review of Private Law, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 1165-1170
ISSN: 0928-9801
Can European Property Law Be Codified? Towards the Development of Property Notions
In: Lei Chen and C.H. (Remco) van Rhee, Towards a Chinese Civil Code: Comparative and Historical Perspectives (Leiden: Brill, November 2012), pp. 153-175
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European Property Law: A Methodology for the Future
In: EUROPEAN PRIVATE LAW - CURRENT STATUS AND PERSPECTIVES, Schulze/Schulte-Nölke, eds., Sellier European Law Publishers, Munich, Forthcoming
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Surety Agreements and the Principle of Accessority - Personal Security in the Light of a European Property Law Principle
In: European Review of Private Law, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 309-331
ISSN: 0928-9801
The surety?s duty is both subsidiary and accessory to the principal debtor?s duty. Subsidiarity means that the surety only has to pay in case the principal debtor is unable or unwilling to do so. Accessority means that the (continued) existence, extent and contents of the surety?s duty depend on the (continued) existence, extent and contents of the principal debtor?s duty. The accessority principle applies particularly to real securities, but it also plays an important role with regard to personal securities, protecting (non-professional) sureties. It is submitted that the accessority principle should be seen as a fundamental principle of surety protection, not only at a national, but also at a European level.