The U.S. Supreme Court justifies the broad enforceability of arbitration agreements with the notion that arbitration expands parties\u27 autonomy to contract for an efficient alternative to court proceedings. Unfortunately, the current practice of both domestic and cross-border commercial arbitration does not fully live up to these expectations. It is crucial to both autonomy and efficiency theories of contract law that adjudicatory decision-making is predictable so parties can tailor their contracts accordingly. However, commercial arbitration\u27s prevailing culture of confidentiality and lack of stare decisis diminishes commercial certainty. To bring the reality of commercial arbitration closer to the Supreme Court\u27s reasoning, this A...
The Supreme Court simply stopped talking about the limits of arbitration as a mechanism for the adju...
This article examines the mixed effect of arbitration upon the generation of international law norms...
Do arbitrators create precedent? The claim that they do not recurs throughout much of the arbitratio...
The U.S. Supreme Court justifies the broad enforceability of arbitration agreements with the notion ...
This Article examines whether the incorporation of commercial norms into commercial codes is an appr...
This Article analyzes the United States Federal Arbitration Act, as a statutory framework for effect...
This Article first explores the Supreme Court\u27s initially reluctant application of the FAA\u27s c...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
This article delves into the intricate dynamics surrounding the application of the ex aequo et bono ...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Few criteria for evaluating arbitrator independence and impartiality will stay foolproof for long, g...
We study a data set of 2,858 contracts contained as exhibits in Form 8-K filings by reporting corpor...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
The Supreme Court simply stopped talking about the limits of arbitration as a mechanism for the adju...
This article examines the mixed effect of arbitration upon the generation of international law norms...
Do arbitrators create precedent? The claim that they do not recurs throughout much of the arbitratio...
The U.S. Supreme Court justifies the broad enforceability of arbitration agreements with the notion ...
This Article examines whether the incorporation of commercial norms into commercial codes is an appr...
This Article analyzes the United States Federal Arbitration Act, as a statutory framework for effect...
This Article first explores the Supreme Court\u27s initially reluctant application of the FAA\u27s c...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
This article delves into the intricate dynamics surrounding the application of the ex aequo et bono ...
Employment, brokerage, and other contracts routinely include predispute arbitration clauses-provis...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Few criteria for evaluating arbitrator independence and impartiality will stay foolproof for long, g...
We study a data set of 2,858 contracts contained as exhibits in Form 8-K filings by reporting corpor...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
The Supreme Court simply stopped talking about the limits of arbitration as a mechanism for the adju...
This article examines the mixed effect of arbitration upon the generation of international law norms...
Do arbitrators create precedent? The claim that they do not recurs throughout much of the arbitratio...