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The concept of delocalised arbitration tends to evade any active judicial control over arbitral awards at the place of arbitration. The judicial control over arbitral awards is nowadays reduced to the extent of their conformity with transnational public policy. That is the reason why the losing party to the arbitral proceedings tries to invoke the procedural human rights as a minimum protective standard under international human rights law. This study sheds light on the question as to whether international human rights law is to be applied to the international commercial arbitration. Moreover,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The concept of delocalised arbitration tends to evade any active judicial control over arbitral awards at the place of arbitration. The judicial control over arbitral awards is nowadays reduced to the extent of their conformity with transnational public policy. That is the reason why the losing party to the arbitral proceedings tries to invoke the procedural human rights as a minimum protective standard under international human rights law. This study sheds light on the question as to whether international human rights law is to be applied to the international commercial arbitration. Moreover, it specifies some serious violations of procedural human rights occurring in the arbitral process and determines the responsibility of states for tolerating such violations which take place within their jurisdiction.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Aleksandar Jaksic was born in 1959 in Kovin, Vojvodina (FR of Yugoslavia). In 1990 he got his Ph.D. degree. He was a grant-holder of some most important European law institutes. In 1998 the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation allowed him a two-year reserach grant. In the last decade he was active as a lawyer in West Europe, mostly in Luxembourg and Switzerland. Since autumn 2000 he has been teaching Private International Law at the Faculty of Law in Belgrade.