Commercial parties commonly resolve their disputes in arbitration rather than courts. In fact, some estimate that as many as 90 percent of international commercial contracts opt for arbitration of future disputes, and others claim that some industries never resort to courts. However, a study of arbitration clauses in a wide variety of contracts, including franchise agreements, CEO employment contracts, technology contracts, joint venture agreements and consumer cell phone contracts, reveals that parties very often carve out a right to resort to courts for the resolution of claims designed to protect information, innovation, and reputation. Studies of international and cross-border contracts indicate that the preference for courts requires t...
The authors explore a model in which agents enter into a contract but are uncertain about how a judg...
More than one thoughtful international business manager has been haunted by the fear that foreign ju...
Adhesive consumer arbitration agreements pose questions that go beyond the problems of adhesion cont...
Commercial parties commonly resolve their disputes in arbitration rather than courts. In fact, some ...
International commercial arbitration is the most preferred dispute resolution method in cross-border...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The American system of arbitration is constantly evolving. From the first formal arbitration tribun...
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Atlantic Marine v. U.S. District Court perhaps usefully resolve...
Some people view international commercial arbitration as an exotic, private dispute resolution mecha...
Recent United States Supreme Court decisions reaffirm the Court’s emphatic interpretation of the Fed...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The future of arbitration depends not only on a...
Patent rights play an essential role in the global economy and represent valuable assets to any busi...
Arbitration clauses now appear in many of the form contracts through which consumers obtain goods, s...
In developing a contractual response to changes in the economic environment, parties choose the meth...
The authors explore a model in which agents enter into a contract but are uncertain about how a judg...
More than one thoughtful international business manager has been haunted by the fear that foreign ju...
Adhesive consumer arbitration agreements pose questions that go beyond the problems of adhesion cont...
Commercial parties commonly resolve their disputes in arbitration rather than courts. In fact, some ...
International commercial arbitration is the most preferred dispute resolution method in cross-border...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The American system of arbitration is constantly evolving. From the first formal arbitration tribun...
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Atlantic Marine v. U.S. District Court perhaps usefully resolve...
Some people view international commercial arbitration as an exotic, private dispute resolution mecha...
Recent United States Supreme Court decisions reaffirm the Court’s emphatic interpretation of the Fed...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The future of arbitration depends not only on a...
Patent rights play an essential role in the global economy and represent valuable assets to any busi...
Arbitration clauses now appear in many of the form contracts through which consumers obtain goods, s...
In developing a contractual response to changes in the economic environment, parties choose the meth...
The authors explore a model in which agents enter into a contract but are uncertain about how a judg...
More than one thoughtful international business manager has been haunted by the fear that foreign ju...
Adhesive consumer arbitration agreements pose questions that go beyond the problems of adhesion cont...