...of the Public Policy exception under Article V of the New York Convention.[4] It also seeks to advance a comparative discourse concerning international developments to determine which end of the...
...of Mexican procedural law. ISEC and ITT are multinational corporations based in New York, and the substantive law of New York was applied to resolve the dispute. Mexico, the United...
...in the arbitration may also prolong the proceedings, since it may necessitate new submissions, and potentially new (witness) evidence or even a new document production phase. It therefore appears reasonable...
Author: Report of the International Arbitration Club of New York Published: May 2013 Description: I. INTRODUCTION The international business community relies largely upon international commercial arbitration for the resolution of...
Author: Richard W. Hulbert* Published: December 2003 Topics: Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Enforceability Proposals to Create an International Arbitration System New York Convention Description: Professor Park’s paper lays before us...
...(1958)1 (the “New York Convention” or “Convention”). For over 50 years, the New York Convention has served two principle purposes, each of which relates to the enforcement of agreements to...
...Art. 1’s stipulation to enforceability under the New York Convention). [22] Id. [23] Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (“New York Convention”), June 6, 1958, Art....
...arbitration agreement pursuant to section 103(2)(b) of the Arbitration Act, this section transposes the text of the New York Convention 1958 into English law and not under English common law.[50]...
...Russian Supreme Court overturned these decisions on public policy grounds, citing Article V(2)(b) of the New York Convention and Articles 234-244 of the Russian Arbitrazh Procedure Code. The Supreme...
...a host of new generation Bilateral Investment Treaties (“BITs”), mostly signed at the beginning of the 21st century, constitutes an unequivocal signal that it is plodding along a new road....
...in such distant and expensive arbitration capitals as London, Paris and New York. By using commercial arbitration rules modeled on the AAA rules, developing a roster of arbitrators trained in...
...in a state of uncertainty. Conclusion By broadening the public policy exception under the New York Convention to include consideration of arbitrators’ nationalities, the SCR has introduced a new level...
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