Modern Comparative Legal Trends

The aim of the book series published by the Ferenc Mádl Institute for Comparative Law under the title “Modern Trends in Comparative Law” is to present the global legal challenges of the 21st century and their comparative legal approaches in a scholarly manner, but in a way that is also useful for the application of law. The volumes offer an international overview of legal developments, new regulatory models, and similarities and differences between legal systems. The series serves as a guide for international and domestic experts, legislators, legal practitioners, and researchers alike, helping them to understand legal trends and adopt best practices.

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The Practice and Regulation of the Hungarian Market Surveillance

Péter Sereg

2026

Financial market surveillance represents one of the most intricate forms of state power, operating at the intersection of law, economics, and institutional decision-making. The Hungarian supervisory framework is the result of more than one hundred and fifty years of legal development, extending far beyond the traditional boundaries of financial law.

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Trends in European Family Law

Zsuzsa Wopera

2026

Family law has always been a sensitive area of ​​legislation and legal practice, where the most intimate and private legal disputes arise. Their correct management, whether at the level of national legislation or EU legislation, also requires an empathetic approach and professionalism from all participants be they legislators, judges, lawyers or legal experts.

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Best Practices in the Regulation of Adoption in a Comparative Legal Context

Zsuzsa Wopera – Adrienn Nagy (eds.)

2025

The second volume of the Modern Comparative Legal Trends series, entitled Best Practices in the Regulation of Adoption in a Comparative Legal Context, has been published. The aim of the book is to examine the regulation of adoption in a comparative legal context, including and highlighting best international practices.