This Article seeks to demonstrate that the public policy of doctrine should be, and in general has been, limited to two types of cases. First, as already discussed, an agreement to arbitrate should not be enforced when the statute or case law principle at issue has aims other than promoting justice between the parties. Second, when a party to the agreement belongs to a class peculiarly subject to imposition by the class to which the other party belongs, an agreement to arbitrate will not and should not be enforced. In the latter class of cases, the susceptibility to imposition may be the product of unequal bargaining power, or of unequal transaction costs that make it likely that one party will draft an agreement that the other will sign wi...
As a matter of general contract law, illegal contracts are unenforceable in court pursuant to the pu...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
A leading contemporary expert in arbitration has explained: The concept of arbitrability determines...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
In this Article, I argue that arbitration agreements fall somewhere along the middle of the rights/c...
Part II of this Article will provide a survey of the FAA, the cases that have enforced it since its ...
In this Article, Professor Guzman resolves the tension that exists between mandatory legal rules and...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
The author of this article tries to support the hypothesis that the absence of a provision of the ap...
This Article first explores the Supreme Court\u27s initially reluctant application of the FAA\u27s c...
Prompted by a dispute over a labor arbitrator’s controversial reinstatement award in favor of an Ore...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
As arbitration agreements become more common, bankruptcy courts increasingly encounter arbitration a...
As a matter of general contract law, illegal contracts are unenforceable in court pursuant to the pu...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
A leading contemporary expert in arbitration has explained: The concept of arbitrability determines...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
In this Article, I argue that arbitration agreements fall somewhere along the middle of the rights/c...
Part II of this Article will provide a survey of the FAA, the cases that have enforced it since its ...
In this Article, Professor Guzman resolves the tension that exists between mandatory legal rules and...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
One of the most complex problems in the arbitration field is the question of who decides disputes ov...
The author of this article tries to support the hypothesis that the absence of a provision of the ap...
This Article first explores the Supreme Court\u27s initially reluctant application of the FAA\u27s c...
Prompted by a dispute over a labor arbitrator’s controversial reinstatement award in favor of an Ore...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
As arbitration agreements become more common, bankruptcy courts increasingly encounter arbitration a...
As a matter of general contract law, illegal contracts are unenforceable in court pursuant to the pu...
The general notion of arbitrability is practically as old as arbitration itself, and yet it remains ...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...