This Note examines a Second Circuit decision that determined private, international arbitration proceedings do not qualify for the same discovery assistance as do foreign, governmental proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 ( § 1782 ). This Note will focus on the Second Circuit\u27s controversial interpretation of § 1782 and its impact on the future of private, international arbitration
Part I analyzes the decision of a U.S. bankruptcy court in Springer Penguin that stayed an internati...
In response to rising litigation costs and overburdened court dockets, parties are realizing the opp...
Phoenix Aktiengesellschaft v. Ecoplas, Inc. presented the Second Circuit with an unresolved question...
This Note examines a Second Circuit decision that determined private, international arbitration proc...
With little fanfare the United States in 1970 revolutionized its treatment of private international ...
With the increasingly globalized economy, arbitration is becoming a popular mechanism for resolving ...
Phillips v. Congelton (In re White Mountain Mining Co.), presents a heightened version of the confli...
Limited discovery is one of the regularly cited advantages of international arbitration, as opposed ...
A recent Court of Appeals decision has made it more difficult for judges in the United States to sec...
Some people view international commercial arbitration as an exotic, private dispute resolution mecha...
© 2009 Cambridge University Press. Online edition of the journal is available at http://journals.cam...
This note focuses on the history of arbitration to provide a general background of arbitration, in P...
This Article explores two dimensions of the relationship between transnational arbitration and litig...
As a party to one-fourth of all civil litigation2 the federal government exerts a looming presence i...
Since its inception, 28 U.S.C. § 17822 has been the subject of revisions, amendments, and much debat...
Part I analyzes the decision of a U.S. bankruptcy court in Springer Penguin that stayed an internati...
In response to rising litigation costs and overburdened court dockets, parties are realizing the opp...
Phoenix Aktiengesellschaft v. Ecoplas, Inc. presented the Second Circuit with an unresolved question...
This Note examines a Second Circuit decision that determined private, international arbitration proc...
With little fanfare the United States in 1970 revolutionized its treatment of private international ...
With the increasingly globalized economy, arbitration is becoming a popular mechanism for resolving ...
Phillips v. Congelton (In re White Mountain Mining Co.), presents a heightened version of the confli...
Limited discovery is one of the regularly cited advantages of international arbitration, as opposed ...
A recent Court of Appeals decision has made it more difficult for judges in the United States to sec...
Some people view international commercial arbitration as an exotic, private dispute resolution mecha...
© 2009 Cambridge University Press. Online edition of the journal is available at http://journals.cam...
This note focuses on the history of arbitration to provide a general background of arbitration, in P...
This Article explores two dimensions of the relationship between transnational arbitration and litig...
As a party to one-fourth of all civil litigation2 the federal government exerts a looming presence i...
Since its inception, 28 U.S.C. § 17822 has been the subject of revisions, amendments, and much debat...
Part I analyzes the decision of a U.S. bankruptcy court in Springer Penguin that stayed an internati...
In response to rising litigation costs and overburdened court dockets, parties are realizing the opp...
Phoenix Aktiengesellschaft v. Ecoplas, Inc. presented the Second Circuit with an unresolved question...