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16 - Private Autonomy in International Commercial Dispute Resolution

International Commercial Arbitration and International Commercial Courts

from Part IV - The Interplay between International Commercial Courts and Other Dispute Resolution Fora

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 April 2022

Stavros Brekoulakis
Affiliation:
Queen Mary University of London
Georgios Dimitropoulos
Affiliation:
Hamad Bin Khalifa University
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Summary

This chapter looks at the current relationship between international commercial courts (ICommCs) and international commercial arbitration (ICA). It first covers the historical background and current drivers for international dispute resolution. It finds ICommCs are of complex identity whose utility will be tested by market choice. The chapter then discusses what is meant by autonomy in the present context, and continues by looking at the needs and requirements of international dispute resolution (‘imperatives’) from a number of perspectives: those of the consumer (the ‘business imperative’), of governments (the ‘political imperative’) and of non-arbitral decision-makers (the ‘jurisprudential imperative’). From that review, a measure of interdependence between ICA and ICommCs emerges. The chapter ends with the conclusion that ICA and ICommCs will enjoy a competitive and collaborative, but not hybrid, relationship.

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Chapter
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International Commercial Courts
The Future of Transnational Adjudication
, pp. 388 - 420
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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