
Arbitration is the dispute resolution method of choice in international commerce, but it rests on a complex legal foundation. In many international commercial contracts, the parties will choose the law governing any future disputes. However, where the parties do not choose a governing law, the prevailing approach in arbitration is to afford arbitrators broad and largely unfettered discretion to choose the law considered most appropriate or most applicable. The uncertainty resulting from this discretion potentially affects the parties' rights and obligations, the performance of their contract, the presentation of their cases, and negotiations undertaken to settle their disputes. In this text, Dr Benjamin Hayward critically reviews the prevailing approach to the conflict of laws in international commercial arbitration. The text adopts a focused and detail-oriented analysis - being based on a study of more than 130 sets of arbitral laws and rules from around the world, and drawing heavily on arbitral case law. Nevertheless, it remains both practical and accessible, taking as its focus the needs and expectations of commercial parties, who are the ultimate users of international commercial arbitration. This text identifies the difficulties that result from resolving conflicts of laws through broad and unconstrained arbitral discretions. It establishes that a bright-line test would be a preferable way to resolve arbitral conflicts of laws. Specifically, it recommends a modified Art. 4 Rome Convention rule as the ideal basis for law reform in this area of arbitral procedure.
This text investigates whether the current practice of granting arbitrators broad discretion to determine governing law in international commercial contracts creates unnecessary uncertainty for parties. Dr. Benjamin Hayward, an expert in private international law, argues that the prevailing lack of constraint in arbitral decision-making undermines the predictability required for international commerce. He proposes a shift toward a more structured, bright-line test, specifically advocating for a modified version of the Article 4 Rome Convention rule to standardize and improve arbitral procedure.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners recognize this work as a rigorous examination of the procedural challenges inherent in international commercial arbitration. Experts frequently highlight the author's synthesis of extensive case law as a valuable resource for those seeking to reform arbitral standards.
Page Count:
385
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191091332
ISBN-13:
9780191091339
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