International arbitration has become the preferred dispute resolution mechanism in cross-border disputes. In the course of time, ad hoc arbitration, where the parties have to create their own rules and procedures, has increasingly been replaced by institutional arbitration where a specialised institution with a permanent organisation provides assistance and a set of practice-proven rules. The services and rules provided by the various institutions of arbitration differ. In order to inform the potential parties and their counsels about the differences and to make the choice between the different arbitration regimes easier, and to offer guidance through the various provisions, this book provides a comprehensive article-by-article commentary of rules of arbitration of 14 important arbitration institutions:
AAA (American Arbitration Association)
CIEDAC (China International Economic and Trade Arbitration)
DIAC (Dubai International Arbitration Centre)
DIS (German Institution of Arbitration)
ICC (International Court of Arbitration)
ICSID (International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes)
KLRCA (Kuala Lumpur Regional Centre for Arbitration)
LCIA (The London Court of International Arbitration)
MKAS (Moscow International Commercial Arbitration Court)
SCC (Stockholm Chamber of Commerce Arbitration)
SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre)
Swiss Rules
UNCITRAL Rules
Vienna Rules
Rezensionen / Stimmen
... there are few books out there that really get to grips with the current rules that govern arbitration institutions and guide the reader through the various provisions. In light of this, this book's commentary is particularly impressive...It provides deep and varied insight into subtle distinctions between the rules and the differences in the wording of the various articles. In addition, a massive advantage that this book offers is timeliness... a digestible read which gives a well-structured and straightforward approach to clarifying the interpretation of the aforementioned rules...It would be worthwhile to make room for it on your bookshelf whether you are an academic, practitioner or work in connection with institutional arbitration. Ultimately, it will provide parties and their counsels with a strong basis on which to base their choice of institution. -- Olivia Staines Association for International Arbitration Newsletter, 'In Touch' A unique volume of extraordinary quality; a must-buy for practitioners in the field of international arbitration. -- Apostolos Anthimos Armenopoulos 2014, p. 371 et seq.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 244 mm
Breite: 173 mm
Dicke: 64 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-84946-366-9 (9781849463669)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Edited by Professor Dr. Rolf A. Schütze, Rechtsanwalt in Stuttgart und Herausgeber und Autor zahlreicher einschlägiger Werke.
With contributions by:
Dr Richard Happe, Hamburg; Dr René-Alexander Hirth, Stuttgart; Robert Hunter, Frankfurt; Dr Werner Jahnel, Zurich; Dr Pierre A. Karrer, Zurich; Dr Thomas R. Klötzel, Stuttgart; Dr Sabine Konrad, Paris; Dr Susanne Kratzsch, Stuttgart; Dr Christoph Liebscher, Vienna; Michael J. Moser, Beijing, Hong Kong; Tilman Niedermaier, Munich; Marie Öström, Stockholm; Dr Paolo Michele Patocchi, Geneva; Prof. Dr Andreas Reiner, Vienna; Prof. Dr. Rolf A. Schütze; Dr Sabine Stricker-Kellerer, Munich; Dr Ulrich Theune, Hamburg; Prof. Dr Roderich C. Thümmel; Prof. Dr Alexander Trunk, Kiel
General List of Abbreviations and Acronyms Chapter I: Introdution (Schutze) Chapter II: ICC Rules (Reiner/Aschauer) Chapter III: DIS Rules (Theune) Chapter IV: Vienna Rules (Liebscher) Chapter V: Swiss Rules (Karrer) Chapter VI: LCIA Rules (Konrad/Hunter) Chapter VII: MKAS Rules (Trunk) Chapter VIII: CIETAC Rules (Stricker-Kellerer/Moser) Chapter IX: SIAC Rules (Hirth) Chapter X: KLRCA Rules (Klotzel) Chapter XI: IAR (Thummel) Chapter XII: SCC Rules (Ohrstrom) Chapter XIII: DIAC Rules (Kratzsch) Chapter IVX: ICSID Rules (Happ) Chapter XV: UNCITRAL Rules (Patocchi/Niedermaier)