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Arbitrators as Lawmakers
Barnes and Noble
Arbitrators as Lawmakers
Current price: $209.00
Barnes and Noble
Arbitrators as Lawmakers
Current price: $209.00
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About the author:
Dolores Bentolila is an international arbitration associate attorney in White & Case’s Geneva office. She advises on both contract and treaty-based arbitrations, in a wide range of sectors. She has also assisted arbitrators in high-profile arbitrations in the oil sector and worked as a legal consultant for UNCTAD’s Investment Agreements Section and WIPO. Before establishing in Geneva, Ms. Bentolila practiced law in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
About this book:
Arbitrators as Lawmakers analyses how arbitrators make rules that guide, constrain, and define the process and substance of international arbitration. Arbitral lawmaking is an emerging topic with the existing literature not providing the needed analysis of legal theory and arbitral practice. This book aims to bridge the gap by explaining the three different stages of arbitral lawmaking – before, during, and after the rule is made: first stage is the situation of the arbitrator and the legal framework governing it; second stage is the process of lawmaking; and finally the third stage is when the consistent arbitral solution is launched to a wider public.
What’s in this book:
This book investigates and responds to the following questions:
The answers to these questions are drawn from arbitral decisions made available to the public, clarifying important issues about jurisdiction, procedure, applicable law, interpretation of substantive rules and instruments, and remedies.
How this will help you:
Providing a thorough and multidisciplinary analysis of the actors, process, and outcome of arbitral lawmaking, this study shows how arbitrators create principles of law through consistent arbitral decision-making. As such, it is of immeasurable and lasting value to practitioners, scholars, arbitral institutions, and international organizations worldwide, for all of whom it will not only enable an understanding of arbitral decision-making and arbitrator-made rules but also foster transparency and accountability in the process of arbitral decision-making.