The PhD course is articulated in six curricula:
IUS/07 – Labour Law. The curriculum in Labour law seek to realize these formative aims: individual specialist researches about labour relation, trade union right and social security paying a particular attention to the analysis of the law in force and to the consideration of the law evolution and to the comparative topics.
IUS/12 – Tax Law. The curriculum is carrying into the principle of transparency, impartiality, effectivity and efficiency. The auspicated parity conditions between administration and taxpayers are still far but the new legislation, among the Statute of the Tax Payer, make a different behaviour of these relations impressed to a major collaboration.
IUS/04 - IUS/05 – Commercial, Company, Financial and Competition Law. The three years long PhD course aims at training the candidates to the PhD degree to scientific research and will focus on these themes: (i) the Law of Business Enterprises, including Company Law, Commercial Contracts Law, Intellectual Property Law, Competition Law; Law of Groups of Companies; (ii) the Law of Public Supervision on Enterprises; (iii) Banking and Insurance Law; (iv) Securities Regulation and Financial Markets’.
IUS/02 – Comparative Private Law. The curriculum presents innovative aspects and a qualified openness towards relationships with foreign institutions. Candidates are asked to develop individual researches on the basis of a study programme which involves as main sectors: (i) private comparative law and its several articulations; (ii) European and EU private law; (iii) uniform law deriving from international conventions; (iv) law arising from international contractual practices (c.d. lex mercatoria).
IUS/01 - IUS/19 - Civil Law and History of European Law: The purpose is to prepare PhD students for scientific research in Civil Law and History of European Law. The training programme includes: (i) the study of European private law in its historical evolution, through the in-depth study of the main institutions in a diachronic perspective; (ii) the rights and interests protected by the rules and the so-called fundamental rights; (iii) the process of European integration; (iv) the study of convergence aspects in the evolution of European legal systems.
IUS/15 – Civil Procedure Law: The PhD in civil procedure deals with all the fundamental themes of the matter: declaratory judgment, enforcement proceedings, interim injunctions, voluntary jurisdiction, arbitration, bankruptcy proceedings. Other subjects of the course are: general theory of legal process, administration of justice, private international law, comparative civil procedure, EU civil procedure
|