European University Institute Library

The American influence on international commercial arbitration, doctrinal developments and discovery methods, Pedro J. Martinez-Fraga

Label
The American influence on international commercial arbitration, doctrinal developments and discovery methods, Pedro J. Martinez-Fraga
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The American influence on international commercial arbitration
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
496961814
Responsibility statement
Pedro J. Martinez-Fraga
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
doctrinal developments and discovery methods
Summary
This text traces the contours of US doctrinal developments concerning international commercial arbitration. It explores international commercial arbitration as a bridge that creates symmetry between what the author perceives as an anomaly arising from the disparities between the monolithic framework arising from economic globalization and a fragmented global judicial counterpart. Specifically, American common law discovery precepts are analyzed through the prism of the fundamental precepts of party-autonomy, predictability, uniformity, and transparency of spender, which the author contends to be the rudimentary tenets of both the American common law procedural rubric and the very principles that international commercial arbitration seeks not only to preserve but to enhance. Therefore, as the author asserts, the discovery process endemic to American common law comports more closely with international commercial arbitration both procedurally and theoretically than with those of the 'taking of evidence' methodology commonly used in international commercial arbitrations held under the auspices of arbitral institutional bodies.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- The formation and transformation of the status of international and domestic arbitration in the United States -- Wilko v. Swan, Scherk v. Alberto-Culver, and Mitsubishi v. Soler : crafting a level playing field -- Procedural change and 28 U.S.C. 1782 : the taking of evidence v. common law discovery -- The gathering of evidence v. common law discovery -- What has really happened? The effects of a trilogy examined -- The new unorthodox conception of common law discovery in international arbitration -- And now how do we avoid 28 U.S.C. Section 1782 in international commercial arbitration? -- Perjury & arbitration : the honor system where the arbitrators have the honor and the parties have the system -- Developments in the apportionment of jurisdiction between arbitrators and courts concerning the validity of a contract containing an arbitration clause, and transformations regarding the severability doctrine -- U.S. arbitration law and its dialogue with the New York Convention : the development of four issues
Classification
Content