The Oxford Handbook of International Arbitration
Herausgeber: Schultz, Thomas; Ortino, Federico
The Oxford Handbook of International Arbitration
Herausgeber: Schultz, Thomas; Ortino, Federico
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This Handbook offers academics and practitioners a one-stop-shop entry into the subject of international arbitration, and the ways in which it is discussed today.
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This Handbook offers academics and practitioners a one-stop-shop entry into the subject of international arbitration, and the ways in which it is discussed today.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 1024
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. November 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 183mm x 60mm
- Gewicht: 1752g
- ISBN-13: 9780198796190
- ISBN-10: 0198796196
- Artikelnr.: 58478875
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 1024
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. November 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 183mm x 60mm
- Gewicht: 1752g
- ISBN-13: 9780198796190
- ISBN-10: 0198796196
- Artikelnr.: 58478875
Thomas Schultz is Professor of Law at King's College London, Professor of International Arbitration at the University of Geneva, Visiting Professor of International Law at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, and Co-Director of the Geneva Center for International Dispute Settlement. He is the author of Transnational Legality: Stateless Law and International Arbitration (Oxford University Press 2014), Information Technology and Arbitration: A Practitioner's Guide (Kluwer 2006), Réguler le commerce électronique par la résolution des litiges en ligne (Bruylant 2005) and Online Dispute Resolution (Kluwer 2004, with Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler), and the Editor-in-Chief and founder of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement (Oxford University Press). Federico Ortino is Reader in International Economic Law at King's College London and a Consultant to Clifford Chance, specialising in international trade and investment law. He is a member of the ILA Committee on The Rule of Law and International Investment Law; member of the Executive Council (and former co-treasurer) of the Society of International Economic Law; member of the E15 Task Force on Investment Policy; consultative member of the Investment Treaty Forum; editorial board member of the Journal of International Economic Law; Yearbook on International Investment Law and Policy, Journal of International Dispute Settlement and the Journal of World Investment and Trade and one of the General Editors of Hart Publishing Studies in International Trade and Investment Law. He is the author of Basic Legal Instruments for the Liberalisation of Trade: A Comparative Analysis of EC and WTO Law (Hart 2004) and co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of International Investment Law (OUP 2008).
* 1: Thomas Schultz and Niccolò Ridi: Arbitration Literature
* Part I: Cornerstones
* 2: William W. Park: Arbitration and Law
* 3: Alex Mills: Arbitral Jurisdiction
* 4: Jan Paulsson: Appointment of Arbitrators
* 5: Stavros Brekoulakis: Transnational Public Policy in International
Arbitration
* 6: Ursula Kriebaum: Human Rights and International Investment
Arbitration
* 7: Andrea K. Bjorklund: Enforcement of awards
* 8: V.V. Veeder: Inter-State arbitration
* Part II: Actors
* 9: Thomas Schultz: The Ethos of Arbitration
* 10: Florian Grisel: Marginals and Elites in International Arbitration
* 11: Jacqueline Nolan-Haley: Mediators in Arbitration
* 12: Nathalie Bernasconi, Martin Dietrich Brauch, and Howard Mann:
Civil Society and International Investment Arbitration: Tracing the
Evolution of Concern
* 13: Jean d'Aspremont: The Control Over Knowledge by International
Courts and Arbitral Tribunals
* Part III
* 14: Loukas Mistelis: Efficiency. What Else? Efficiency as the
Emerging Defining Value of International Arbitration: Between Systems
Theories and Party Autonomy
* 15: Frédéric Bachand and Fabien Gélinas: Legal Certainty and
Arbitration
* 16: Ralf Michaels: International Arbitration as Private and Public
Good
* 17: David Schneiderman: Investment Arbitration as Constitutional Law:
Constitutional Analogies, Linkages, and Absences
* 18: Makane Moïse Mbengue and Deepak Raju: The Environment and
Investment Arbitration
* 19: David Caron and Esme Shirlow: The Multiple Forms of Transparency
in International Investment Arbitration: Their Implications, and
Their Limits
* 20: Tibisay Morgandi: Arbitration and Offshore Resources in Disputed
Maritime Areas
* Part IV: Paradigms
* 21: Horatia Muir Watt: International Arbitration: A Critical Private
International Law Perspective
* 22: Hélène Ruiz Fabri and Edoardo Stoppioni: Arbitration: A Feminist
Approach
* 23: Emmanuel Gaillard: The Arbitral Legal Order: Evolution and
Recognition
* 24: Andrea Bianchi: Epistemic Communities in International
Arbitration
* 25: Myriam Gicquello: Artificial Intelligence and Arbitration
* 26: Anil Yilmaz Vastardis: Investment Treaty Arbitration as Justice
Bubbles
* Part V: Empirical Evidence
* 27: Christopher R. Drahozal: Empirical Findings on International
Arbitration: An Overview
* 28: Thomas Dietz: The Rule Of Law Effects Of Commercial
Arbitration From A Socio-Legal Perspective
* 29: Cédric Dupont, Thomas Schultz, and Jason Yackee: Investment
Arbitration and Political Systems Theory
* 30: Moshe Hirsch: The Sociological Dimension Of International
Arbitration: The Investment Arbitration Culture
* 31: Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen: The Politics of Investment Treaty
Arbitration
* Part VI: Perspectives
* 32: Yves Dezalay and Bryant G. Garth: International Commercial
Arbitration: The Creation Of A Legal Market
* 33: Taylor St John: The Creation of Investor-State Arbitration
* 34: Elena Cima: Energy Arbitrations
* 35: Alexis Keller: Interstate Arbitration: Five Moments
* 36: Anne van Aaken and Tomer Broude: Arbitration From a Law and
Economics Perspective
* 37: François Ost: Arbitration and Literature
* 38: Tony Cole and Pietro Ortolani: Arbitration in its Psychological
Context: A Contextual Behavioral Account of Arbitral Decision-making
* Part I: Cornerstones
* 2: William W. Park: Arbitration and Law
* 3: Alex Mills: Arbitral Jurisdiction
* 4: Jan Paulsson: Appointment of Arbitrators
* 5: Stavros Brekoulakis: Transnational Public Policy in International
Arbitration
* 6: Ursula Kriebaum: Human Rights and International Investment
Arbitration
* 7: Andrea K. Bjorklund: Enforcement of awards
* 8: V.V. Veeder: Inter-State arbitration
* Part II: Actors
* 9: Thomas Schultz: The Ethos of Arbitration
* 10: Florian Grisel: Marginals and Elites in International Arbitration
* 11: Jacqueline Nolan-Haley: Mediators in Arbitration
* 12: Nathalie Bernasconi, Martin Dietrich Brauch, and Howard Mann:
Civil Society and International Investment Arbitration: Tracing the
Evolution of Concern
* 13: Jean d'Aspremont: The Control Over Knowledge by International
Courts and Arbitral Tribunals
* Part III
* 14: Loukas Mistelis: Efficiency. What Else? Efficiency as the
Emerging Defining Value of International Arbitration: Between Systems
Theories and Party Autonomy
* 15: Frédéric Bachand and Fabien Gélinas: Legal Certainty and
Arbitration
* 16: Ralf Michaels: International Arbitration as Private and Public
Good
* 17: David Schneiderman: Investment Arbitration as Constitutional Law:
Constitutional Analogies, Linkages, and Absences
* 18: Makane Moïse Mbengue and Deepak Raju: The Environment and
Investment Arbitration
* 19: David Caron and Esme Shirlow: The Multiple Forms of Transparency
in International Investment Arbitration: Their Implications, and
Their Limits
* 20: Tibisay Morgandi: Arbitration and Offshore Resources in Disputed
Maritime Areas
* Part IV: Paradigms
* 21: Horatia Muir Watt: International Arbitration: A Critical Private
International Law Perspective
* 22: Hélène Ruiz Fabri and Edoardo Stoppioni: Arbitration: A Feminist
Approach
* 23: Emmanuel Gaillard: The Arbitral Legal Order: Evolution and
Recognition
* 24: Andrea Bianchi: Epistemic Communities in International
Arbitration
* 25: Myriam Gicquello: Artificial Intelligence and Arbitration
* 26: Anil Yilmaz Vastardis: Investment Treaty Arbitration as Justice
Bubbles
* Part V: Empirical Evidence
* 27: Christopher R. Drahozal: Empirical Findings on International
Arbitration: An Overview
* 28: Thomas Dietz: The Rule Of Law Effects Of Commercial
Arbitration From A Socio-Legal Perspective
* 29: Cédric Dupont, Thomas Schultz, and Jason Yackee: Investment
Arbitration and Political Systems Theory
* 30: Moshe Hirsch: The Sociological Dimension Of International
Arbitration: The Investment Arbitration Culture
* 31: Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen: The Politics of Investment Treaty
Arbitration
* Part VI: Perspectives
* 32: Yves Dezalay and Bryant G. Garth: International Commercial
Arbitration: The Creation Of A Legal Market
* 33: Taylor St John: The Creation of Investor-State Arbitration
* 34: Elena Cima: Energy Arbitrations
* 35: Alexis Keller: Interstate Arbitration: Five Moments
* 36: Anne van Aaken and Tomer Broude: Arbitration From a Law and
Economics Perspective
* 37: François Ost: Arbitration and Literature
* 38: Tony Cole and Pietro Ortolani: Arbitration in its Psychological
Context: A Contextual Behavioral Account of Arbitral Decision-making
* 1: Thomas Schultz and Niccolò Ridi: Arbitration Literature
* Part I: Cornerstones
* 2: William W. Park: Arbitration and Law
* 3: Alex Mills: Arbitral Jurisdiction
* 4: Jan Paulsson: Appointment of Arbitrators
* 5: Stavros Brekoulakis: Transnational Public Policy in International
Arbitration
* 6: Ursula Kriebaum: Human Rights and International Investment
Arbitration
* 7: Andrea K. Bjorklund: Enforcement of awards
* 8: V.V. Veeder: Inter-State arbitration
* Part II: Actors
* 9: Thomas Schultz: The Ethos of Arbitration
* 10: Florian Grisel: Marginals and Elites in International Arbitration
* 11: Jacqueline Nolan-Haley: Mediators in Arbitration
* 12: Nathalie Bernasconi, Martin Dietrich Brauch, and Howard Mann:
Civil Society and International Investment Arbitration: Tracing the
Evolution of Concern
* 13: Jean d'Aspremont: The Control Over Knowledge by International
Courts and Arbitral Tribunals
* Part III
* 14: Loukas Mistelis: Efficiency. What Else? Efficiency as the
Emerging Defining Value of International Arbitration: Between Systems
Theories and Party Autonomy
* 15: Frédéric Bachand and Fabien Gélinas: Legal Certainty and
Arbitration
* 16: Ralf Michaels: International Arbitration as Private and Public
Good
* 17: David Schneiderman: Investment Arbitration as Constitutional Law:
Constitutional Analogies, Linkages, and Absences
* 18: Makane Moïse Mbengue and Deepak Raju: The Environment and
Investment Arbitration
* 19: David Caron and Esme Shirlow: The Multiple Forms of Transparency
in International Investment Arbitration: Their Implications, and
Their Limits
* 20: Tibisay Morgandi: Arbitration and Offshore Resources in Disputed
Maritime Areas
* Part IV: Paradigms
* 21: Horatia Muir Watt: International Arbitration: A Critical Private
International Law Perspective
* 22: Hélène Ruiz Fabri and Edoardo Stoppioni: Arbitration: A Feminist
Approach
* 23: Emmanuel Gaillard: The Arbitral Legal Order: Evolution and
Recognition
* 24: Andrea Bianchi: Epistemic Communities in International
Arbitration
* 25: Myriam Gicquello: Artificial Intelligence and Arbitration
* 26: Anil Yilmaz Vastardis: Investment Treaty Arbitration as Justice
Bubbles
* Part V: Empirical Evidence
* 27: Christopher R. Drahozal: Empirical Findings on International
Arbitration: An Overview
* 28: Thomas Dietz: The Rule Of Law Effects Of Commercial
Arbitration From A Socio-Legal Perspective
* 29: Cédric Dupont, Thomas Schultz, and Jason Yackee: Investment
Arbitration and Political Systems Theory
* 30: Moshe Hirsch: The Sociological Dimension Of International
Arbitration: The Investment Arbitration Culture
* 31: Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen: The Politics of Investment Treaty
Arbitration
* Part VI: Perspectives
* 32: Yves Dezalay and Bryant G. Garth: International Commercial
Arbitration: The Creation Of A Legal Market
* 33: Taylor St John: The Creation of Investor-State Arbitration
* 34: Elena Cima: Energy Arbitrations
* 35: Alexis Keller: Interstate Arbitration: Five Moments
* 36: Anne van Aaken and Tomer Broude: Arbitration From a Law and
Economics Perspective
* 37: François Ost: Arbitration and Literature
* 38: Tony Cole and Pietro Ortolani: Arbitration in its Psychological
Context: A Contextual Behavioral Account of Arbitral Decision-making
* Part I: Cornerstones
* 2: William W. Park: Arbitration and Law
* 3: Alex Mills: Arbitral Jurisdiction
* 4: Jan Paulsson: Appointment of Arbitrators
* 5: Stavros Brekoulakis: Transnational Public Policy in International
Arbitration
* 6: Ursula Kriebaum: Human Rights and International Investment
Arbitration
* 7: Andrea K. Bjorklund: Enforcement of awards
* 8: V.V. Veeder: Inter-State arbitration
* Part II: Actors
* 9: Thomas Schultz: The Ethos of Arbitration
* 10: Florian Grisel: Marginals and Elites in International Arbitration
* 11: Jacqueline Nolan-Haley: Mediators in Arbitration
* 12: Nathalie Bernasconi, Martin Dietrich Brauch, and Howard Mann:
Civil Society and International Investment Arbitration: Tracing the
Evolution of Concern
* 13: Jean d'Aspremont: The Control Over Knowledge by International
Courts and Arbitral Tribunals
* Part III
* 14: Loukas Mistelis: Efficiency. What Else? Efficiency as the
Emerging Defining Value of International Arbitration: Between Systems
Theories and Party Autonomy
* 15: Frédéric Bachand and Fabien Gélinas: Legal Certainty and
Arbitration
* 16: Ralf Michaels: International Arbitration as Private and Public
Good
* 17: David Schneiderman: Investment Arbitration as Constitutional Law:
Constitutional Analogies, Linkages, and Absences
* 18: Makane Moïse Mbengue and Deepak Raju: The Environment and
Investment Arbitration
* 19: David Caron and Esme Shirlow: The Multiple Forms of Transparency
in International Investment Arbitration: Their Implications, and
Their Limits
* 20: Tibisay Morgandi: Arbitration and Offshore Resources in Disputed
Maritime Areas
* Part IV: Paradigms
* 21: Horatia Muir Watt: International Arbitration: A Critical Private
International Law Perspective
* 22: Hélène Ruiz Fabri and Edoardo Stoppioni: Arbitration: A Feminist
Approach
* 23: Emmanuel Gaillard: The Arbitral Legal Order: Evolution and
Recognition
* 24: Andrea Bianchi: Epistemic Communities in International
Arbitration
* 25: Myriam Gicquello: Artificial Intelligence and Arbitration
* 26: Anil Yilmaz Vastardis: Investment Treaty Arbitration as Justice
Bubbles
* Part V: Empirical Evidence
* 27: Christopher R. Drahozal: Empirical Findings on International
Arbitration: An Overview
* 28: Thomas Dietz: The Rule Of Law Effects Of Commercial
Arbitration From A Socio-Legal Perspective
* 29: Cédric Dupont, Thomas Schultz, and Jason Yackee: Investment
Arbitration and Political Systems Theory
* 30: Moshe Hirsch: The Sociological Dimension Of International
Arbitration: The Investment Arbitration Culture
* 31: Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen: The Politics of Investment Treaty
Arbitration
* Part VI: Perspectives
* 32: Yves Dezalay and Bryant G. Garth: International Commercial
Arbitration: The Creation Of A Legal Market
* 33: Taylor St John: The Creation of Investor-State Arbitration
* 34: Elena Cima: Energy Arbitrations
* 35: Alexis Keller: Interstate Arbitration: Five Moments
* 36: Anne van Aaken and Tomer Broude: Arbitration From a Law and
Economics Perspective
* 37: François Ost: Arbitration and Literature
* 38: Tony Cole and Pietro Ortolani: Arbitration in its Psychological
Context: A Contextual Behavioral Account of Arbitral Decision-making