“…And yet, it would be harder still to find an academic legal discipline that is flourishing as much as “European private law” (Schmid 1999; Hesselink 2002). Specialized academic journals are thriving, 5 voluminous learned tomes on “European” tort and contract law have appeared (Von Bar 1998, 2000; Kötz 2000), publishers are producing dedicated series of books, 6 courses and modules are offered throughout the continent, collections of conference papers come out in a steady stream (Hartkamp 1994; Müller-Graff 1999; Van Hoecke and Ost 2000; Grundmann and Struyck 2002; Vogenauer and Weatherill 2006), chairs and graduate schools are dedicated to the subject, and a variety of lavishly funded transnational research projects is producing libraries full of work (Wurmnest 2003): the Ius Commune school is uncovering common principles through a series of casebooks (Van Gerven 1998; Van Gerven, Lever, and Larouche 2000; Beale 2002; Beatson and Schrage 2003), and the Trento Group is slowly unearthing the Common Core of European Private Law (Bussani and Mattei 2003; Zimmermann and Whittaker 2000; Gordley 2001; Bussani and Valentine Palmer 2003; Kieniger 2004; Sefton-Green 2005). 7 The Lando Commission has produced its “Principles of European Contract Law” (Lando and Beale 2000; Lando 2003), the Tilburg Group has produced similar principles of European Tort Law (European Group on Tort Law 2005; Wagner 2005), the Academy of European Private Lawyers in Pavia has come out with a draft European Code of Contracts (Gandolfi 2001), and the Study Group on a European Civil Code is working away on its draft articles and comparative studies (Von Bar and Drobnig 2004).…”