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Evolution of International Arbitration

Judicialization, Governance, Legitimacy

«The innovative theory of judicialization set forth in the book, and the thorough data collection used to illustrate and complement the analysis, are valuable contributions to the study of international arbitration. This book will provide scholars, practitioners, law students and neophytes with a tremendous compilation of materials and analytic research to better apprehend not only the evolution of international arbitration, but also to understand arbitration as an autonomous legal order as we know it today.»

Camille Martini, Journal of International Economic Law 2017

The development of international arbitration as an autonomous legal order is one of the most remarkable stories of institution building at the global level over the past century. Today, transnational firms and states settle their most important commercial and investment disputes not in courts, but in arbitral centres, a tightly networked set of organizations that compete with one another for docket, resources, and influence. Les mer

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The development of international arbitration as an autonomous legal order is one of the most remarkable stories of institution building at the global level over the past century. Today, transnational firms and states settle their most important commercial and investment disputes not in courts, but in arbitral centres, a tightly networked set of organizations that compete with one another for docket, resources, and influence.

In this book, Alec Stone Sweet and Florian Grisel show that international arbitration has undergone a self-sustaining process of institutional evolution that has steadily enhanced arbitral authority. This judicialization process was sustained by the explosion of trade and investment, which generated a steady stream of high stakes disputes, and the efforts of elite arbitrators and the major centres to construct arbitration as a viable substitute for litigation in domestic courts. For their
part, state officials (as legislators and treaty makers), and national judges (as enforcers of arbitral awards), have not just adapted to the expansion of arbitration; they have heavily invested in it, extending the arbitral order's reach and effectiveness. Arbitration's very success has, nonetheless,
raised serious questions about its legitimacy as a mode of transnational governance.

The book provides a clear causal theory of judicialization using original data and analysis, and a broad, relatively non-technical overview of the evolution of the arbitral order. Each chapter compares international commercial and investor-state arbitration, across clearly specified measures of judicialization and governance. Topics include: the evolution of procedures; the development of precedent and the demand for appeal; balancing in the public interest; legitimacy debates and proposals for
systemic reform. This book is a timely assessment of how arbitration has risen to become a key component of international economic law and why its future is far from settled.

Detaljer

Forlag
Oxford University Press
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780198739722
Utgivelsesår
2017
Format
24 x 16 cm

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«The innovative theory of judicialization set forth in the book, and the thorough data collection used to illustrate and complement the analysis, are valuable contributions to the study of international arbitration. This book will provide scholars, practitioners, law students and neophytes with a tremendous compilation of materials and analytic research to better apprehend not only the evolution of international arbitration, but also to understand arbitration as an autonomous legal order as we know it today.»

Camille Martini, Journal of International Economic Law 2017

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