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Statutory obligations to take out liability insurance are, in practice, the most important means to ensure compensability of damage arising from dangerous activities. However, in contrast to the significant practical impact, academic research on the topic has not been extensive so far. This study, therefore, undertakes a comprehensive survey of compulsory liability insurance from nine national perspectives (Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom) and takes constitutional and European law (four freedoms, European Convention on Human Rights) as well as the Principles of European Insurance Contract Law (PEICL) into account. It also contains an extensive economic analysis of compulsory liability insurance and discusses aspects of insurability. A Comparative Report, Conclusions and an Annex containing a compilation of rules on compulsory liability insurance in the nine national legal systems complete the study. It considers in particular:
the aims of provisions stating an obligation to take out liability insurance
the mandatory content of insurance cover
the protection mechanisms linked to compulsory liability insurance
the control mechanisms and the sanctions imposed
structural deficiencies of existing compulsory liability insurance systems
the overall scheme for the law of liability insurance
from a constitutional and a European perspective (implications of the four freedoms and the European Convention on Human Rights)