It is well established that for many centuries, arbitration has been a regular, even frequent, method of dispute settlement in the Western World. Derek Roebuck has done path breaking research demonstrating this in his recent book covering the middle ages (1154-1558)1 and in his contribution to this symposium, “The English Experience: What the First American Colonists Knew of Mediation and Arbitration.”2 My own work, with the excellent help of co-authors Henry Horwitz and Su Jin Kim, has explored English patterns from the late 17th century into the 1800s, also tracing the English approach into the American colonies and the early Republic. Recourse to arbitration has not always been satisfying, yet for the most part it has attracted participa...
Long before laws were established, or courts were organized, or judges formulated principles of law,...
While arbitration was robust in colonial and early America, dispute resolution lost its footing to t...
The law did not look kindly on arbitration in its infancy. As a process by which two or more parties...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
The purpose of this symposium edition of the Journal of Dispute Resolution is to widen the focus of ...
The practice of arbitration in seventeenth-century England has not been the subject of close study. ...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
In 1786, legal reform activist Benjamin Austin undertook a campaign to promote the use of arbitratio...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
The purpose of this symposium edition of the Journal of Dispute Resolution is to widen the focus of ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
While arbitration was robust in colonial and early America, dispute resolution lost its footing to t...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
Long before laws were established, or courts were organized, or judges formulated principles of law,...
While arbitration was robust in colonial and early America, dispute resolution lost its footing to t...
The law did not look kindly on arbitration in its infancy. As a process by which two or more parties...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
The purpose of this symposium edition of the Journal of Dispute Resolution is to widen the focus of ...
The practice of arbitration in seventeenth-century England has not been the subject of close study. ...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
In 1786, legal reform activist Benjamin Austin undertook a campaign to promote the use of arbitratio...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
The purpose of this symposium edition of the Journal of Dispute Resolution is to widen the focus of ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
While arbitration was robust in colonial and early America, dispute resolution lost its footing to t...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
Long before laws were established, or courts were organized, or judges formulated principles of law,...
While arbitration was robust in colonial and early America, dispute resolution lost its footing to t...
The law did not look kindly on arbitration in its infancy. As a process by which two or more parties...