International Commercial Arbitration Function and legal framework University of Oslo Giuditta Cordero-Moss, Ph.D., Dr.Juris Professor, Oslo University
Arbitration Private settlement of disputes Alternative to courts
Two main effects It excludes national court’s jurisdiction It results in an enforceable award
Contractual or judicial? Based on will of the parties Enjoys judicial recognition
Arbitration v. Courts Neutrality Expertise Confidentiality Finality Enforceability (New York Convention of 1958) Jurisdiction (New York Convention of 1958) Costs One party’s country General legal background Publicity Appeals Limited and not harmonised enforceability (Lugano Convention, Brussels I, Hague convention) Limited and not harmonised regulation of jurisdiction (Lugano Convention, Brussels I, Hague convention) Length
”International” Arbitration Character of the dispute (France) Residence of the Parties (Swiss, Sweden, Belgium) Character or residence (Italy) Character, residence or choice (UNCITRAL) No need to distinguish (Holland, Germany, Norway)
International v. domestic arbitration Less formal requirements Less interference by courts
Is International Arbitration International? (”Delocalisation”) Mostly voluntarily carried out Venue chosen out of practical convenience Parties want flexibility If not voluntarily carried out, courts must intervene Venue determines arbitration law (e.g. Arbitrators’ injunctive powers), arbitrability, validity of award Parties want predictability
Legal framework Arbitration agreement (contractual nature) Arbitration rules (contractual nature) Domestic arbitration law (legislative nature, but few mandatory rules) International conventions (legisltive nature, few rules mandatory for the parties) Soft law (voluntary nature)
Arbitration agreement Consent of the parties is the basis for the arbitral tribunal’s powers
Arbitration agreement Type of arbitration Scope [Seat] [Number of arbitrators] [Language] [Procedural rules]
Arbitration rules Rules of the chosen institution UNCITRAL Rules if chosen by the parties (in case of ad hoc arbitration) Rules written by the parties in case of ad hoc arbitration Rules determined by the arbitral tribunal in the absence of an agreement between the parties
Arbitration rules Constitution of the arbitral tribunal Seat Powers of the arbitral tribunal Procedural rules Costs
Arbitration law The arbitral procedure is regulated by arbitration law of the place of arbitration
Arbitration law Part of domestic legal system in each state To a large extent harmonised thanks to the UNCITRAL Model Law Model Law is not binding Even Model Law countries may have different regulation Always check the local arbitration law!
UNCITRAL Model Law texts/arbitration/1985Model_arbitration.ht mlhttp:// texts/arbitration/1985Model_arbitration.ht ml Adopted in nearly 70 countries: texts/arbitration/1985Model_arbitration_sta tus.html Autonomous interpretation
Arbitration law Recognition of arbitration agreements Arbitrability Role of courts Constitution of the arbitral tribunal Seat Powers of the arbitral tribunal Procedural rules Costs Mandatory principles on due process Validity of arbitral awards Enforcement of arbitral awards
New York Convention texts/arbitration/NYConvention.htmlhttp:// texts/arbitration/NYConvention.html Ratified by 146 countries: texts/arbitration/NYConvention_status.html
Convention Recognition of arbitration agreements Enforcement of arbitral awards
Soft law IBA Rules on taking of evidence spx?DocumentUid=68336C BF- A1C6-A8F DC spx?DocumentUid=68336C BF- A1C6-A8F DC IBA Rules on conflict of interest spx?DocumentUid=e2fe5e72-eb14-4bba- b10d-d33dafee8918
Soft law Matters within the discretion of arbitral tribunal