The allocation of power between arbitral tribunals and state courts

The ultimate question that runs through all of our law of arbitration is the allocation of responsibility between state courts and arbitral0tribunals : If private tribunals assume the power to bind others in a definitive fashion, we must ask, where does this authority come from ?0Fundamentally diffe...

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1. Verfasser: Rau, Alan Scott (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Leiden BRILL NIJHOFF 2018
Schriftenreihe:The Pocket Books of The Hague Academy of International Law / Les livres de poche de l'Académie de droit international de La Haye
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Zusammenfassung:The ultimate question that runs through all of our law of arbitration is the allocation of responsibility between state courts and arbitral0tribunals : If private tribunals assume the power to bind others in a definitive fashion, we must ask, where does this authority come from ?0Fundamentally different in this respect from a state judge, a private arbitrator may only derive his legitimacy from that exercise of private0ordering and self-government which characterizes any voluntary commercial transaction. This work begins then with the dimensions of that "consent" which alone can justify arbitral jurisdiction. The discussion is then carried forward to explore how party autonomy in the contracting process may be expanded, giving rise to the voluntary reallocation of authority between courts and arbitrators. It concludes with the necessary inquiry into the autonomy with respect to the "chosen law" that will govern the agreement to arbitrate itself
Beschreibung:599 Seiten
ISBN:9004388915
90-04-38891-5
9789004388925
978-90-04-38892-5
9789004388918
978-90-04-38891-8