Supreme Court case law teaches us that the federal interest in arbitration does not consist of enforcing agreements to arbitrate according to some sort of abstract or ideal arbitral model, but rather according to the particular arbitral model upon which the parties had agreed. This body of law is driven by the same notions of party autonomy that underlie the law of arbitration generally. That parties may agree to forego access to national courts in favor of arbitration is an initial manifestation of that attitude. By logical extension, the parties also enjoy extraordinary latitude in determining the features that their eventual arbitration should display. A legal system that elevates party autonomy in arbitration to such a high level of i...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...
Supreme Court case law teaches us that the federal interest in arbitration does not consist of enfor...
A fundamental principle of arbitration law is that parties may only be compelled to submit an issue ...
The U.S. Supreme Court\u27s jurisprudence interpreting the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) is incohere...
A leading contemporary expert in arbitration has explained: The concept of arbitrability determines...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
Arbitration is a way to resolve disputes outside the courts as a form of an alternative dispute reso...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favoring ...
Historically, Anglo-American courts refused to enforce arbitration agreements, jealously guarding th...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
Most fields of law provide guidance on how courts decide cases. In contrast, arbitration law tells j...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...
Supreme Court case law teaches us that the federal interest in arbitration does not consist of enfor...
A fundamental principle of arbitration law is that parties may only be compelled to submit an issue ...
The U.S. Supreme Court\u27s jurisprudence interpreting the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) is incohere...
A leading contemporary expert in arbitration has explained: The concept of arbitrability determines...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
Arbitration is a way to resolve disputes outside the courts as a form of an alternative dispute reso...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favoring ...
Historically, Anglo-American courts refused to enforce arbitration agreements, jealously guarding th...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
Most fields of law provide guidance on how courts decide cases. In contrast, arbitration law tells j...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...