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Daniel Girsberger#12586

Prof Daniel Girsberger , LL.M.

Daniel Girsberger is a founding member of the Faculty of Law of the University of Lucerne (www.unilu.ch) and a tenured professor for Swiss and International Private, Business and Procedural, as well as Comparative Law. Before accepting the Lucerne assignment, he taught at the University of Zurich law school. He is also of counsel at Kaufmann Rüedi Ltd., a boutique Lucerne business law firm (www.krlaw.ch).

Daniel Girsberger completed his legal and doctoral studies at the University of Zurich, where he also taught as an adjunct professor. He has an LL. M. in Common Law Studies from Georgetown University Law School (Washington, D.C.), where he also spent time as a Visiting Scholar, as well as at the Max-Planck Institute for Foreign and International Private Law in Hamburg. He has taught as an adjunct at various universities and institutions abroad, such as in Brazil, Lithuania, the United States, South Africa, and the Academy for International Law in The Hague, and participated as a member of the Swiss delegation at the Hague Conference for Unification of International Private Law. He headed the Working Group on Choice of Law of the Hague Conference on Private International Law (2010-2015). He is also the Vice President of the Board of the Swiss Association for International Law and a member (and former head) of the editorial committee of the Swiss Review of International and European Law. Daniel Girsberger is the author of numerous publications focusing primarily on international private and international business law, international arbitration, and ADR. He has also frequently acted as chairman, as arbitrator and counsel in numerous international and domestic arbitration proceedings, both institutional and ad hoc, and has been an expert witness in a multitude of international litigation and arbitration proceedings. He is also a certified mediator, and has mediated several B2B disputes. Daniel Girsberger is a Member of the Arbitration Court of the Swiss Arbitration Centre (the former Swiss Chambers’ Arbitration Institution) and its Advisory Council on Mediation.

For more information on Daniel Girsberger’s academic activities and publications, see https://www.unilu.ch/en/faculties/faculty-of-law/professorships/girsberger-daniel/staff/prof-dr-daniel-girsberger/

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

1 Contributions by Daniel Girsberger

HCCH Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts: Overview, Party Autonomy, Non-state Rules, Key Provisions, Public Policy, Implementation and Future Developments
PRACTICE NOTES
HCCH Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts: Overview, Party Autonomy, Non-state Rules, Key Provisions, Public Policy, Implementation and Future Developments
This Practice Note outlines the Hague Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts, referred to as the HCCH Principles and previously called the Hague Principles. It is an international instrument intended to address cross-border commercial dealings. It operates across jurisdictions to support cross-border commercial activity worldwide in practice. What are the HCCH Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts? The HCCH Principles address matters of private international law (conflict of laws) concerning contracts. Modern legal systems maintain their own domestic private international law rules, which commonly vary from one State to another. The possibility of divergent decisions and differing readings of private international law rules (including rules on choice of law) creates significant uncertainty for global trade and commerce. For many years, avoiding inconsistent judicial outcomes has been a core preoccupation of international lawyers. That concern has spurred, not least, international organisations such as the Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH) to pursue the unification of private international law. With 92 members (91 States and the EU as at March 2026) spanning every continent, the HCCH is the leading organisation in this field. The HCCH’s statutory purpose is to strive for the ‘progressive unification’ of...
Dispute Resolution
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