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Featured In: Volume 2 - Issue 1 (Vol. 2 Iss. 1)
Loukas Mistelis, professor of transnational commercial law and arbitration at the School of International Arbitration, Queen Mary College, University of London, takes stock of the year now gone
Featured In: Volume 2 - Issue 1 (Vol. 2 Iss. 1)
Because of a well-regarded court system, the popularity of arbitration in Canada has not accelerated at the same pace as it has in other jurisdictions, writes David Vascott. But times are changing
Featured In: Volume 2 - Issue 1 (Vol. 2 Iss. 1)
To succeed as a Canadian arbitrator, one must get out of Canada, says David Samuels
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
Tomasz Wardynski, of Wardynski & Partners, sees enforcement, rather than settlement, as the likely outcome of Eureko
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
Philip Clifford, partner, and Oliver Browne, associate, at Latham & Watkins in London explain the pitfalls of unilateral options to arbitrate, and how to avoid them
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
Barry Garfinkel, of counsel, and Timothy G Nelson, counsel, at Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP in New York compare arbitration under the ASEAN agreement with better known forms of treaty arbitration
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
India faces a choice, say Aloke Ray and Dipen Sabharwal at White & Case: revive the spirit of the 1996 act, or see a return of the 1940 law
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
David Hacking of Littleton Chambers says it is time all major arbitral institutions gave reasons when deciding challenges to serving arbitrators
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
Fear of issue conflicts cannot be allowed to chill the exchange of ideas, say Matt Gearing, partner, and Anthony Sinclair, associate, both members of the international arbitration group at Allen & Overy LLP
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
The Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce spent 2006 revising its arbitration rules. Kaj Hobér, partner, and William McKechnie, associate at Mannheimer Swartling, outline the key changes in the new rules, which apply from 1 January 2007
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
Plenty of domestic work gives size to Sweden’s leading arbitration practices, says Julius Cavendish. He hears what different groups have to say
Featured In: Volume 1 - Issue 6 (Vol. 1 Iss. 6)
The institute in Stockholm is shedding some of its Swedishness in a bid to attract international work. David Samuels and Julius Cavendish report
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