Purpose of International Commercial Arbitration.
Purpose of International Commercial Arbitration.
Arbitration is a private system of adjudication. Parties who arbitrate have decided to resolve their disputes outside of any judicial system. In most instances, arbitration involves a final and binding decision, producing an award that is enforceable in a national court. The decision-makers (the arbitrators), usually one or three, are generally chosen by the parties. Parties also decide whether the arbitration will be administered by an international arbitral institution, or will be ad hoc, which means no institution is involved. The rules that apply are the rules of the arbitral institution, or other rules chosen by the parties. In addition to choosing the arbitrators and the rules, parties can choose the place of arbitration and the language of arbitration.
Arbitration thus gives the parties
substantial autonomy and control over the process that will be used to resolve
their disputes. This is particularly
important in international commercial arbitration because parties do not want
to be subject to the jurisdiction of the other party’s court system. Each party
fears the other party’s “home
court advantage.” Arbitration offers a more neutral forum, where each side
believes it will have a fair hearing. Moreover, the flexibility of being able
to tailor the dispute resolution process to the needs of the parties, and the
opportunity to select arbitrators who are knowledgeable in the subject matter
of the dispute, make arbitration particularly attractive. Today, international
commercial arbitration has become the norm for dispute resolution in most
international business transactions.
Source:
THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION by Margaret L. Moses, Loyola University Chicago School of Law, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, First published in 2008,Page no.01. Author’s academia ID link: Author’s blogger ID link: Author’s SSRN ID link: |
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