The displacement thesis, which frames the current debate about arbitration, seems to commit a category error. Arbitration is not intelligible only as a stand-in for adjudication. Instead, the truth about arbitration is much more subtle and more variegated. In some cases, arbitration does indeed stand in for court-provided processes of dispute resolution, including adjudication. I shall call such arbitration third-party arbitration or arbitration as judging. But in other cases, arbitration replaces party-provided processes of dispute resolution, which possess their own immanent legitimacy, and in particular supplants the bargaining that precedes contracting. For reasons that will become apparent, I shall call this arbitration first-part...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
Arbitration has long served as a contractual substitute for judicial litigation. It provided a worka...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
The displacement thesis, which frames the current debate about arbitration, seems to commit a catego...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
Arbitration is an alternative dispute resolution method (ADR) and has now become one of the preferre...
The identification of arbitration as it is constituted in legal lore is not very difficult. There is...
Disputing parties who are unable to settle their differences will end up before an adjudicator (typi...
Arbitration is not just another trial procedure. It epitomizes a practical understanding of the purp...
Arbitration has long been called a creature of contract, a dispute resolution mechanism that has no ...
Supreme Court case law teaches us that the federal interest in arbitration does not consist of enfor...
In the second half of the twentieth century, the use of arbitration proliferated in the United State...
With the growth of international trade, arbitration has emerged as the preferred remedy for disputes...
Legal status of an Arbitrator Arbitration, standing aside civil court proceedings and ADRs, has beco...
Professor Frank Sander has, for many years, been one of the most prescient commentators on the alter...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
Arbitration has long served as a contractual substitute for judicial litigation. It provided a worka...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
The displacement thesis, which frames the current debate about arbitration, seems to commit a catego...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
Arbitration is an alternative dispute resolution method (ADR) and has now become one of the preferre...
The identification of arbitration as it is constituted in legal lore is not very difficult. There is...
Disputing parties who are unable to settle their differences will end up before an adjudicator (typi...
Arbitration is not just another trial procedure. It epitomizes a practical understanding of the purp...
Arbitration has long been called a creature of contract, a dispute resolution mechanism that has no ...
Supreme Court case law teaches us that the federal interest in arbitration does not consist of enfor...
In the second half of the twentieth century, the use of arbitration proliferated in the United State...
With the growth of international trade, arbitration has emerged as the preferred remedy for disputes...
Legal status of an Arbitrator Arbitration, standing aside civil court proceedings and ADRs, has beco...
Professor Frank Sander has, for many years, been one of the most prescient commentators on the alter...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
Arbitration has long served as a contractual substitute for judicial litigation. It provided a worka...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...