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The Cambridge Handbook of Judicial Control of Arbitral Awards

Author: Larry A. DiMatteo | Marta Infantino | Nathalie M-P Potin |

15,300.00

Additional information

Weight 1 kg
Dimensions 47.5 × 37 × 1 cm
ISBN

9781108488617

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Format

Hardback

Publishing Date

29-Oct-20

SKU: TMP_PUB_2013 Categories: , , Tags: , Product ID: 24226

Description

A unique collaboration between academic scholars, legal practitioners, and arbitrators, this handbook focuses on the intersection of arbitration – as an alternative to litigation – and the court systems to which arbitration is ultimately beholden. The first three parts analyze issues relating to the interpretation of the scope of arbitration agreements, arbitrator bias and conflicts of interest, arbitrator misconduct during the proceedings, enforceability of arbitral awards, and the grounds for vacating awards. The next section features fifteen country-specific reviews, which demonstrate that, despite the commonality of principles at the international level, there is a significant of amount of differences in the application of those principles at the national level. This work should be read by anyone interested in the general rules and principles of the enforceability of foreign arbitral awards and the grounds for courts to vacate or annul such awards.

 

  • Discusses important issues in international commercial arbitration theory and practice
  • Provides a comprehensive reference to rules and issues relating to arbitrator misconduct
  • Reviews areas of non-arbitrability under national laws by highlighting the differences in the meaning of public policy across countries

Table of Contents

Part I. Vacating Commercial Arbitration Awards:
1. Introduction: Intersection of courts and arbitration Marta Infantino, Nathalie Potin and Larry A. Dimatteo
2. Independence and impartiality of arbitrators Carlos Matheus López
3. Exploring the parameters of conflicts of interest Nathalie Potin and Tunde Ogunseitan
4. Procedural irregularities and misconduct during proceedings Alexander Belohlavek
Part II. Enforcing Commercial Arbitration Awards:
5. Inter-arbitration association conflict Richard Happ
6. Requirements for enforceability Daìrio Manuel Lentz De Moura Vicente
Part III. Scope and Interpretation of Arbitration Clauses:
7. Judicial interpretation of standard clauses Rocio Digon and Tony Cole
8. Industry-specific clauses and their interpretation Alexandra-Luiza Ionescu (Mareș)
9. Drafting, interpretation, and enforcement of arbitration clauses: a practitioner’s perspective Philippe Cavalieros
Part IV. Judicial Control over Arbitral Awards: Country Reports:
10. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Argentina Maria Beatriz Burghetto
11. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Australia Luke Nottage, Nobumichi Teramura and Jim Morrison
12. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Bulgaria Oleg Temnikov
13. Judicial control of arbitral awards in China Lei Chen and Wang Hao
14. Judicial control of arbitral awards in France Denis Bensaude
15. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Germany Joseph Schwartz
16. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Italy Marta Infantino
17 Judicial control of arbitral awards in Nigeria Tunde Ogunseitan and Nathalie Potin
18. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Poland Jerzy Pisuliński and Piotr Tereszkiewicz
19. Judicial control of arbitral awards in the Russian Federation Dmitry Dozhdzev
20. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Spain Teresa Rodriguez De Las Heras Ballell
21. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Switzerland Phillip Landolt
22. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Ukraine Galyna Mykhailiuk
23. Judicial control of arbitral awards in United Kingdom Andrew Tetley
24. Judicial control of arbitral awards in the United States Larry A. Dimatteo
Part V. Summary and Findings:
25. Divergence, themes, and trends in national arbitration laws Nathalie Potin, Marta Infantino and Larry A. Dimatteo
26. Shared control system over arbitral proceedings Friedrich Rosenfeld.