UNCITRAL 2012 Digest of Case Law on the Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration

UNCITRAL 2012 Digest of Case Law on the Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration
Author: United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9789211337938

This publication contains a presentation of case laws rendered in jurisdictions having enacted the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. In light of the large number of cases collected, the Commission requested a tool specifically designed to present selected information on the interpretation and application of the Model Law in a clear, concise and objective manner. This request originated the UNCITRAL Digest of Case Law on the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. The purpose of the digest is to assist in the dissemination of information on the Model Law and further promote its adoption as well as its uniform interpretation and application. In addition, the digest is meant to help judges, government officials, arbitrators, practitioners and academics use more efficiently the case law relating to the UNCITRAL text.

Arbitration and International Trade in the Arab Countries

Arbitration and International Trade in the Arab Countries
Author: Nathalie Najjar
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 1340
Release: 2017-10-23
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9004357483

Arbitration and International Trade in the Arab Countries by Nathalie Najjar is masterful compendium of arbitration law in the Arab countries. A true study of comparative law in the purest sense of the term, the work puts into perspective the solutions retained in the various laws concerned and highlights both their convergences and divergences. Focusing on the laws of sixteen States, the author examines international trade arbitration in the MENA region and assesses the value of these solutions in a way that seeks to guide a practice which remains extraordinarily heterogeneous. The book provides an analysis of a large number of legal sources, court decisions as well as a presentation of the attitude of the courts towards arbitration in the States studied. Traditional and modern sources of international arbitration are examined through the prism of the two requirements of international trade, freedom and safety, the same prism through which the whole law of arbitration is studied. The book thus constitutes an indispensable guide to any arbitration specialist called to work with the Arab countries, both as a practitioner and as a theoretician.

The Legal Status of Tiran and Sanafir Islands

The Legal Status of Tiran and Sanafir Islands
Author: Askar H. Enazy
Publisher: King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies
Total Pages: 76
Release: 2017-04-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 6038206264

Dirasat: In-depth research publication is written by a specialist to discuss political and intellectual issues in the Middle East region and the world. Published monthly in Arabic and English. As stipulated in its articles, the boundary agreement would come into force only after being ratified by both contracting countries in accordance with their respective constitutional procedures. This Saudi Arabia had done shortly thereafter. Egypt, on the other hand, has not, despite that the fact that more than one year had already passed since it placed its signature on the accord. The Egyptian cabinet did not approve the agreement until the end the year, on December 29, before referring it to the parliament, which has not yet set a date to debate it.

Fraudulent Evidence Before Public International Tribunals

Fraudulent Evidence Before Public International Tribunals
Author: W. Michael Reisman
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2014-05-08
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1139952862

Domestic lawyers are, above all, officers of the court. By contrast, the public international lawyer representing states before international tribunals is torn between loyalties to the state and loyalties to international law. As the stakes increase for the state concerned, the tension between these loyalties can become acute and lead to practices that would be condemned in developed national legal systems but have hitherto been ignored by international tribunals in international legal scholarship. They are the 'dirty stories' of international law. This detailed and contextually sensitive presentation of eight important cases before a variety of public international tribunals dissects some of the reasons for the resort to fraudulent evidence in international litigation and the profession's baffling reaction. Fraudulent evidence is resorted to out of greed, moral mediocrity or inherent dishonesty. In public international litigation, by contrast, the reasons are often more complex, with roots in the dynamics of international politics.