“…The future of harmonisation of European private law seems, at least for the time being, to be better off relying on the slow building of a European legal scholarship, based, for example, on courses of European private law and on the comparative work produced by national legislatures and courts, rather than on grand European legislative projects (Smits, 2004: paras. 47 ff;Bauer andMikulaschek, 2005: 1110-15;Wagner, 2006;Schepel, 2007). Accordingly, the harmonisation of private legal norms with an impact on children's rights and interests needs, for now, to settle for comparative child law courses, international conferences on children's rights, scholarly research on the impact of EU policy on children, and raising the awareness of national legislatures of the law applicable to children in other EU member states.…”