...rules on contract formation and lack of formal requirements can clash with local government procurement laws. For instance, Article 11 allows informal contracts, but countries like Brazil may require written...
...(56 cases), and Brazil at 4.4% (42 cases). Unsurprisingly, the preliminary figures for arbitrator nationality statistics tie in nicely with the applicable law statistics. Of the 92 countries from which...
...emotion and gender “detection” under scrutiny in a court case in Brazil, Access Now (June 29, 2020, 4:20 PM), https://www.accessnow.org/facial-recognition-on-trial-emotion-and-gender-detection-under-scrutiny-in-a-court-case-in-brazil/. [4] Michael G. Aamodt & Heather Custer, Who can best...
...the spectrum, some countries not only authorize, but even mandate that corporate disputes be settled by arbitration in certain circumstances. Notably, Brazil requires corporations to adopt an arbitration clause in...
...its scope of protection. Such express exclusion is a rarity, and is found in a handful of BITs such as the Brazil Model BIT of 2015 (Art 1.3). Other model...
...Fellow, and editor of the Journal of Transnational Law. Gustavo Favero Vaughn is a partner at Cesar Asfor Rocha Advogados, in São Paulo, Brazil. Gustavo has master’s...
...and Mexico reflect these countries’ efforts to promote the reliability and use of commercial arbitration. In recent years Brazil has witnessed the emergence of more than one draft law designed...
...were discussed: the United States of America, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico. Day Three (November 17) The third day was the ArbitralWomen day and three webinars were streamed about...
...27, 2021 Benjamin G. Davis A 360-Degree, Kaleidoscopic View of Diversity and Inclusion (or Lack Thereof) in International Arbitration Kabir Duggal and Amanda Lee Diversity in Arbitration in Brazil: An...
...French supermarket chain Casino for its detrimental involvement in the cattle industry in Brazil and Colombia, which resulted in severe human rights and environmental harms. While climate change regulation was...
...the Brazil-Mozambique BIT acknowledges the “essential role of investment in the promotion of sustainable development, economic growth, poverty reduction, job creation, expansion of productive capacity and human development.”[7] The US-Rwanda...
...covering the main arbitration jurisdictions (Austria, Belgium, Brazil, China, England and Wales, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, the Netherlands, the Russian Federation, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States),...
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