The conference organizers set me the daunting task of exploring arbitration\u27s “non-national instruments,” which is to say the guidelines of professional groups and non-governmental organizations related to evidence, conflicts of interest, ethics and the organization of arbitral proceedings. Frequently these procedural standards build on the lore of international dispute resolution as memorialized in articles, treatises and learned symposium papers. These guidelines represent what might be called “soft law,” in distinction to the harder norms imposed by arbitration statutes and treaties, as well as the procedural framework adopted by the parties through choice of pre-established arbitration rules. The growth of procedural soft law has acc...
Arbitration agreements draw the legal relationship not only between the parties but also are the con...
The present article analyzes the recent revision of the International Bar Association Guidelines on ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...
The conference organizers set me the daunting task of exploring arbitration\u27s “non-national instr...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
In international proceedings, a transnational “soft law” often finds expression in rules, guidelines...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
The growth of international arbitration has expanded both the pool of arbitrators as well as the cou...
The rules applicable to arbitration of both hard and soft law share the importance of the independen...
In specific matters of conflicts of interest ethical issues in connection with the parties' legal re...
A former President of the American Arbitration Association (AAA) once mused that most studies of arb...
Depending on context and content, a regulatory framework can either help or hinder efforts to enhanc...
International commercial arbitration is the most preferred dispute resolution method in cross-border...
Few criteria for evaluating arbitrator independence and impartiality will stay foolproof for long, g...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
Arbitration agreements draw the legal relationship not only between the parties but also are the con...
The present article analyzes the recent revision of the International Bar Association Guidelines on ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...
The conference organizers set me the daunting task of exploring arbitration\u27s “non-national instr...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
In international proceedings, a transnational “soft law” often finds expression in rules, guidelines...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
The growth of international arbitration has expanded both the pool of arbitrators as well as the cou...
The rules applicable to arbitration of both hard and soft law share the importance of the independen...
In specific matters of conflicts of interest ethical issues in connection with the parties' legal re...
A former President of the American Arbitration Association (AAA) once mused that most studies of arb...
Depending on context and content, a regulatory framework can either help or hinder efforts to enhanc...
International commercial arbitration is the most preferred dispute resolution method in cross-border...
Few criteria for evaluating arbitrator independence and impartiality will stay foolproof for long, g...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
Arbitration agreements draw the legal relationship not only between the parties but also are the con...
The present article analyzes the recent revision of the International Bar Association Guidelines on ...
A party that submits a controversy to arbitration may later regret having abandoned recourse to the ...