Third Party Funding (TPF) is presented as a tool to help fund the cost of expensive litigation. In the context of Investment Arbitration, however, TPF has instead led to the commodification of justice, and raises concerns around its assetization. Arbitration often comes at a net loss for States, and the extraordinary expenditures required my pique the interest of third party funders who wish to profit from suing States. A two-fold movement contributed to the assetization process of TPF. The first movement was to package TPF as a tool to ensure access to justice, and the second was to assert a 'funding gap' in access to justice that ad hoc TPF alone could not address. TPF leads to more claims and riskier claims against States and increases t...
Third-party funding (TPF) has grown to be a popular phenomenon in the past two decades with a large ...
Third party funding of international litigation and arbitration is controversial. As a phenomenon th...
Third-party funding has ancient origins and was once considered as the crimes of champerty and maint...
Third-party funding of international investment arbitration is on the rise. Through TPF funders will...
The rapid increase of third-party funding (TPF) in investor-state dispute-settlement (ISDS) raises c...
Third-party funding (TPF) is a relatively new phenomenon in the field of international investment ar...
Third-party funding (TPF) is a relatively new phenomenon in the field of international investment ar...
This Perspective examines explanations for the emergence of TPF in ISDS, including key domestic lega...
Third party funding (TPF) is a method of financing legal proceedings, in which a party not directly ...
This study researches the effect of third party funding in international commercial arbitration. Thi...
Third-party financing of commercial litigation is a relatively new phenomenon in the United States. ...
This article addresses the issue of the funding of civil litigation within the framework of access t...
Third-party litigation finance is a growing industry. The practice, also termed “litigation lending,...
The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) is considering changes to its ru...
International arbitration exacts considerable monetary costs. In response, new mechanisms have emerg...
Third-party funding (TPF) has grown to be a popular phenomenon in the past two decades with a large ...
Third party funding of international litigation and arbitration is controversial. As a phenomenon th...
Third-party funding has ancient origins and was once considered as the crimes of champerty and maint...
Third-party funding of international investment arbitration is on the rise. Through TPF funders will...
The rapid increase of third-party funding (TPF) in investor-state dispute-settlement (ISDS) raises c...
Third-party funding (TPF) is a relatively new phenomenon in the field of international investment ar...
Third-party funding (TPF) is a relatively new phenomenon in the field of international investment ar...
This Perspective examines explanations for the emergence of TPF in ISDS, including key domestic lega...
Third party funding (TPF) is a method of financing legal proceedings, in which a party not directly ...
This study researches the effect of third party funding in international commercial arbitration. Thi...
Third-party financing of commercial litigation is a relatively new phenomenon in the United States. ...
This article addresses the issue of the funding of civil litigation within the framework of access t...
Third-party litigation finance is a growing industry. The practice, also termed “litigation lending,...
The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) is considering changes to its ru...
International arbitration exacts considerable monetary costs. In response, new mechanisms have emerg...
Third-party funding (TPF) has grown to be a popular phenomenon in the past two decades with a large ...
Third party funding of international litigation and arbitration is controversial. As a phenomenon th...
Third-party funding has ancient origins and was once considered as the crimes of champerty and maint...