Abstract

This chapter examines the institutional provenance of the Hague Principles from mandate to adoption, which can be traced back to 2006. At a meeting of the Council on General Affairs and Policy of the Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH) that year, the Secretariat of the HCCH was tasked with preparing a feasibility study on the development of an instrument concerning choice of law in international contracts. However, this was not the first time that the HCCH included the topic of international (commercial) contracts on its agenda. Earlier work carried out by the HCCH in this legal domain share similar objectives with the Hague Principles, that is, the consolidation of party autonomy in the private international law of contracts. In sketching the recent and more remote origins of the Principles, the chapter describes the most salient phases in the development of the Hague Principles between 2006 and 2015. It then places this instrument in the broader context of the HCCH’s contribution to party autonomy in international contracts.

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