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24 - Regulating counsel conduct before international arbitral tribunals

from III - Transnational lawyering and dispute resolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 November 2010

Michael Waibel
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The need for regulating counsel conduct in international arbitration

Detlev Vagts had a visionary perspective on the impact of globalisation on the legal profession. He has repeatedly pointed to the problems stemming from the absence of ethical regulation of the transnational practice of law, including dispute settlement before international courts and tribunals. He was already doing so at a time when the proliferation of international dispute settlement bodies was a barely discernible emerging phenomenon, and well before the dramatic increase in treaty-based arbitrations between States and foreign investors under the International Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States (‘ICSID Convention’) and other arbitral rules that has marked the past decade. In 1996, he predicted that ‘[a]s the activities of international law agencies, both public and private, involve more countries and more cultures, disputes about standards of behavior can be expected to multiply’ and, as a response, recommended that ‘[a] set of rules to guide the behavior of lawyers before international panels would be useful’.

Equally Detlev Vagts foresaw how difficult it would be to establish formal rules in an institutional context, in which numerous States with various interests and different approaches to the regulation of lawyers interact. He therefore, attributed great potential to private bodies developing guidelines which could then be adopted by dispute settlement institutions.

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Making Transnational Law Work in the Global Economy
Essays in Honour of Detlev Vagts
, pp. 488 - 509
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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