《仲裁之刃:国际仲裁与法治》

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
Sundaresh Menon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

争端解决制度的合法性本质上取决于使用者对其决策过程的信任和信心,而这反过来又取决于这些过程对构成法治的价值观和原则的普遍遵守。尽管国际仲裁长期以来一直是法院维护法治的亲密合作伙伴,但仲裁的一些关键特征和做法——如基于同意的限制、保密倾向、允许各方单方面任命仲裁员的长期做法,以及其当事人无权得到正确答案的理念,意味着仲裁支持一种弱化的法治模式。这在很大程度上是有意识地决定放弃某些法治价值观以实现其他目标的结果。但是,由于仲裁程序日益僵化和缺乏灵活性,成本上升和延误的问题给仲裁用户和他们对仲裁的信心带来了沉重的代价,没有明显的回报。在寻求推进其他目标时,我们必须认识到仲裁在法治价值观方面的牺牲,并定期反思这些收益是否仍然值得付出代价。国际仲裁、法治、同意、可仲裁性、保密性、多方争议、仲裁员的一方任命、可访问性、成本、延误
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Arbitration’s Blade: International Arbitration and the Rule of Law
The legitimacy of a system of dispute resolution depends intrinsically on the trust and confidence of its users in its decision-making processes, and that in turn rests on the general adherence of those processes to the values and principles that constitute the rule of law. While international arbitration has long been a close partner of the courts in sustaining the rule of law, some of arbitration’s key features and practices – such as its consent-based limitations, its predisposition toward confidentiality, its longstanding practice of permitting parties to unilaterally appoint arbitrators, and its philosophy that parties have no right to a right answer – mean that arbitration supports an attenuated model of the rule of law. That is largely the result of conscious decisions to forgo certain rule of law values in order to realize other goals. But the problem of rising costs and delays, underpinned by arbitration’s growing procedural rigidity and lack of agility, exacts a heavy price on arbitration’s users and their confidence in arbitration, without obvious returns. We must be cognizant of arbitration’s sacrifice in terms of rule of law values when seeking to advance other objectives, and regularly reflect on whether those gains are still worth their cost. International arbitration, Rule of law, Consent, Arbitrability, Confidentiality, Multiparty disputes, Party appointment of arbitrators, Accessibility, Costs, Delays
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
50.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: Since its 1984 launch, the Journal of International Arbitration has established itself as a thought provoking, ground breaking journal aimed at the specific requirements of those involved in international arbitration. Each issue contains in depth investigations of the most important current issues in international arbitration, focusing on business, investment, and economic disputes between private corporations, State controlled entities, and States. The new Notes and Current Developments sections contain concise and critical commentary on new developments. The journal’s worldwide coverage and bimonthly circulation give it even more immediacy as a forum for original thinking, penetrating analysis and lively discussion of international arbitration issues from around the globe.
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