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In the editorial board of journal Pravnik, we strive to ensure that different areas of law are represented in individual issues of the magazine, while at the same time, the criteria for publication in an individual issue is also the topicality of the discussed topic.

Number 9-10/2016

Debt Discharge in Personal Bankruptcy

This article seeks to fill the gap in the Slovenian literature in the field of debt discharge as a part of the personal bankruptcy proceedings. The first part of the article presents the basic theoretical knowledge about personal bankruptcy, with an emphasis on theories of rationalizing the debt discharge proceedings
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Number 9-10/2017

Financing Corporate Reorganizations

The article seeks to present the potential sources of financing the debtor in the financial reorganization proceedings, their basic characteristics, categorization of those sources, and the presentation of the main dilemmas of each individual potential source of financing. Given the lack of such legal literature in Slovenian, the basic purpose of the article is to contribute to the essential legal literature in this field, which could be the basis for much needed further scientific and professional discussions.
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Number 3-4/2019

Trustees’ Rewards as a Mean of Achieving ex post Effectiveness of Insolvency Proceedings

The article seeks to analyse if rewarding insolvency trustees could be used as a tool for incentivizing trustees to pursue ex-post efficiency of insolvency procedures. Although this is an essential topic in insolvency law, literature is scarce. In conducting the study, the author assumed that trustees are agents of creditors (principals) and he examined how trustees could be incentivised to work for the interests of creditors.
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Number 1-2/2025

The Absolute Priority Rule

The absolute priority rule is a fundamental rule of corporate bankruptcy law providing that, in the event of a bankruptcy proceeding, all creditors must be paid in full before equity holders retain any position in the reorganised debtor or are entitled to any payment in liquidation. The rule also requires that all senior creditors be paid in full before junior creditors can collect on outstanding debts. This rule was first noted by Bonbright and Bergeman in 1928. In liquidation cases, the role of the rule is internationally undisputed as an effective and perfectly logical one, and there are no dilemmas regarding its application. The rule simply restates the idea of a stratified ownership structure in which one has bargained to be paid before others. On the other hand, the case for the absolute priority rule in reorganisation proceedings is not as clear or strong. There has been an extensive law and economics debate on the subject, but there is still considerable disagreement as to whether potential exceptions to the absolute priority rule could be justified on the basis of economic efficiency. The author attempts to add to the already abundant literature on the absolute priority rule by adding insights from Slovenian legislation and presenting em- pirical insights from Slovenian cases.


Key words:
absolute priority rule, financial reorganisation, bankruptcy, insol- vency, insolvency proceedings.


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