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The is volume collects the articles emanating from the twenty-first
Congressof the International Council for Commercial Arbitration
(ICCA) held in Singapore in 2012.1t opens with a thought-provoking
keynote address on the present Golden Age of arbitration and its
potential weaknesses and covers both practical and theoretica I
topics addressed by renowned arbitration practitioners and
scholars. Two principal themes are addressed. The first deals with
various aspects of the arbitration proceedings- from the agreement
to arbitrate and the cernmencement of proceedings (with an
introduetion to i- and e-arbitration) to the evidence-collecting
phase, the tribunal's decision and the issue of legal and
arbitration costs. The second examines the interaction between
legal orders and national courts and arbitration; the need for and
role of ethica I codes of behavior; the ba la nee between
investment proteetion and "policy space"; the future of ICSID; and
the role of technologica I tools in arbitration. The volume doses
with the report of a judicia I debate among eleven senior judges
addressing issues in the application of the 1958 New York
Convention.
The Yearbook Commercial Arbitration continues its longstanding
commitment to serving as a primary resource for the international
arbitration community with reporting on arbitral awards and court
decisions applying the leading arbitration conventions, as well as
on arbitration legislation and rules. Volume XXXVII (2012)
includes: excerpts of arbitral awards made under the auspices of
the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC); notes on new and
amended arbitration rules, including references to their online
publication; notes on recent developments in arbitration law and
practice in Colombia, Finland, Hungary, India, Lithuania,
Montenegro, Portugal, Singapore, South Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkey
and Venezuela; excerpts of 82 court decisions applying the 1958 New
York Convention from 22 countries - including for the first time,
cases from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Guatemala and Uruguay - all
indexed by subject matter and linked to the General Editor's
published commentaries on the New York Convention; an extensive
Bibliography of recent books and journals on arbitration. The
Yearbook is edited by the International Council for Commercial
Arbitration (ICCA), the world's leading organization representing
practitioners and academics in the field, with the assistance of
the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague. It is an essential
tool for lawyers, business people and scholars involved in the
practice and study of international arbitration.
The Yearbook Commercial Arbitration continues its longstanding
commitment to serving as a primary resource for the international
arbitration community with reporting on arbitral awards and court
decisions applying the leading arbitration conventions, as well as
on arbitration legislation and rules. Volume XXXV (2010) includes:
* excerpts of arbitral awards made under the auspices of, inter
alia, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC); * notes on new
and amended arbitration rules, including references to their online
publication; * notes on recent developments in arbitration law and
practice in Argentina, Australia, Bahama, Belize, Brunei, PR China,
Fiji, Ireland, Kenya, Mexico, the Russian Federation, Scotland,
Singapore, Spain and Vietnam; * excerpts of 86 court decisions
applying the 1958 New York Convention from 25 countries - including
for the first time, cases from Gibraltar and Uganda - all indexed
by subject matter and linked to the General Editor's published
commentaries on the New York Convention; * an extensive
Bibliography of recent books and journals on arbitration. The
Yearbook is edited by the International Council for Commercial
Arbitration (ICCA), the world's leading organization representing
practitioners and academics in the field, with the assistance of
the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague. It is an essential
tool for lawyers, business people and scholars involved in the
practice and study of international arbitration.
ICCA Congress Series no. 16 comprises the proceedings of the ICCA
50 Geneva Conference 2011 hosted by the ICCA 50 Organizing
Committee on 19-20 May 2011. The Conference marked a major
milestone: the Golden Anniversary of ICCA. A warm word of thanks
goes to the Committee for arranging this splendid celebration in
the beautiful city of Geneva, the birthplace of ICCA.
Volume XXXVII (2012) of the Yearbook again presents readers with a
selection of arbitral awards and court decisions made accessible by
translations, indices and categorized lists. Since Volume XXXV
(2010), the Yearbook's selection of arbitral awards and court
decisions is available in a combination of print edition and online
publishing. Arbitral awards continue to be published in print in
their entirety, as are Parts of the Yearbook providing various
information. Court decisions are presented at two levels of
consultation: a Summary of each decision, prefaced by a short
recap, is published in print; a detailed Excerpt of the decision is
available online at . A code provided with the Yearbook allows
readers to access the relevant Volume online, as well as the
preceding Volume. Readers who have purchased Volume XXXVII (2012)
can therefore access materials from both this Volume and Volume
XXXVI (2011).
Volume 14 of ICCA Congress Series, The New York Convention at 50,
comprises the proceedings of the ICCA Conference held in Dublin in
2008 on the fiftieth anniversary of the 1958 New York Convention on
the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. One of
the highlights of the Conference was a Plenary Session in which the
world's leading arbitration experts debated the need to revise the
New York Convention. This discussion, along with the text of a
preliminary draft of the revised Convention presented during the
Conference, is reported in this volume. Further Reports and
Commentary explore the two main themes of the Conference:
Investment Treaty Arbitration/Treaty Arbitration, with
contributions on: - The Impact of Investment Treaty Arbitration:
Identifying the Expectations, Testing the Assumptions; - Investment
Treaty Arbitration and Commercial Arbitration: Are They Different
Ball Games? - Remedies in Investment Treaty Arbitration: The Bottom
Line; and - The Enforcement of Investment Treaty Awards, and
Rules-Based Solutions to Procedural Issues, with contributions on:
- Multi-party Disputes; - Consolidation of Claims; - Summary
Disposition; and - Provisional Measures. The volume also includes
transcripts of the Round Table Session assessing the revisions to
the UNCITRAL Rules on International Commercial Arbitration and of
an Open Discussion on Recent Developments in International
Arbitration.
The Yearbook Commercial Arbitration continues its longstanding
commitment to serving as a primary resource for the international
arbitration community with reporting on arbitral awards,
arbitration legislation and rules throughout the world as well as
on court decisions applying the leading arbitration
conventions.
Volume XXXII includes:
- excerpts of arbitral awards made under the auspices of, inter
alia, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC);
- notes on new and amended arbitration rules, including references
to their online publication;
- notes on recent developments in arbitration law and practice in
Bolivia, China, Mongolia, New Zealand and Switzerland;
- excerpts of 89 court decisions applying the 1958 New York
Convention from 18 countries -- including, for the first time,
decisions from Pakistan, Portugal and Venezuela -- all indexed by
subject matter and linked to the General Editor's published
commentaries on the New York Convention;
- an extensive Bibliography of recent books and journals on
arbitration.
Edited by the International Council for Commercial Arbitration
(ICCA), the world's leading organization representing practitioners
and academics in the field, the Yearbook is an essential tool for
lawyers, business people and scholars involved in the practice and
study of international arbitration.
Volume 13 of ICCA Congress Series, International Arbitration 2006:
Back to Basics?, contains the proceedings of the 13th ICCA Congress
held in Montreal in 2006, where international commercial
arbitration specialists from around the world gathered to glean
fresh insights on fundamental issues, focusing on three central
themes.
The Reports and Commentary presented in Working Group A of the
Congress concentrate on Re-examining the Arbitration Agreement.
Leading experts explore crucial topics, including:
- The autonomy of the arbitration agreement;
- The arbitrators 'jurisdiction to determine Jurisdiction;
- The law applicable to the arbitration agreement; and
- Treaties as agreements to arbitrate.
Working Group B sessions examine Contemporary Practice in the
Conduct of Proceedings and cover procedural aspects in Round Tables
on:
- Fact testimony;
- Document production;
- The effective use of legal and technical experts; and
- Oral Argument: and in Reports and Commentary on:
- Arbitral Provisional Measures: The Actual Practice; and
- Evidentiary Privileges.
The volume concludes with the papers generated from the Congress's
Plenary Session on Commercial Arbitration and Transnational Public
Policy and Treaty Arbitration and International Law.
"CCA's Congress Series No. 12", reflecting the contributions of
numerous renowned arbitration experts to the 2004 ICCA Beijing
Conference, commences with an overview of the current international
arbitration regime in China and Hong Kong, noting both the progress
that has been achieved and the work that remains to be done there.
The remainder of the volume comprises two sets of papers on
contemporary substantive and procedural issues in international
commercial arbitration. The first set contains in-depth reports on
the topical subjects of arbitration of foreign investment disputes,
the granting of provisional or interim measures with respect to
arbitration and the enforceability of awards, supplemented by
commentary from the point of view of various specializations and
regions. The second, also using the format of reports and
commentary, addresses modalities of conciliation and settlement in
relation to arbitration, including various non-binding (ADR)
processes, issues (drafting step clauses and confidentiality) in
integrated dispute resolution systems, which may combine
conciliation and arbitration, and the role of arbitrators as
settlement facilitators.
The collected papers in ICCA Congress Series no. 11, as reflected
in its title, address important contemporary questions in
international commercial arbitration. Included are contributions
written by participants in the UNCITRAL Working Group on
Arbitration and Conciliation on its current work relating to the
requirement of a written form for an arbitration agreement, interim
measures of protection and the UNCITRAL's Model Law on
International Commercial Conciliation. Further contributions give
leading practitioners' views on illegality in the formation and
performance of contracts or in the conduct of the arbitration,
addressing questions on how the arbitral tribunal should deal with
these vexed issues and how forgery and fraud may be detected. The
factors that lead to acceptance by parties of the decisions of
arbitrators are dealt with in contributions on the psychological
aspects of dispute resolution. The volume concludes with a series
of articles on arbitration under investment treaties written by
experienced arbitrators and practitioners, with special emphasis on
ICSID and NAFTA and the emerging issues of transparency,
accountability and review.
New arbitration legislation throughout the world is based on the
highly successful UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial
Arbitration, and an ever-increasing body of arbitration specialists
in the legal community have all contributed to improving the
relationship of national courts and arbitration. Yet many issues
still remain in this "never-ending story". These issues are
explored in this text, which contains the proceedings of the ICCA
Conference 2000 held in New Delhi, India, in March 2000. This
conference, hosted by the Indian Council of Arbitration, explored
four topics covering the full range of the arbitral process: the
contract, the arbitral proceedings, interim relief, and
enforcement. These issues are addressed both from a global point of
view and with a particular focus on the recent Indian Arbitration
and Conciliation Act 1996, the text of which is reproduced in the
Annex.
The many and varied recent developments in the field of
international commercial arbitration in 1999, are brought together
in this volume of the Yearbook Commercial Arbitration. As in
previous volumes, the accent lies on cases in the form of arbitral
awards and court decisions, 80 in total. They are selected for
inclusion for their general interest and relevance to international
practice, presented in a uniform style and translated into English
from Arabic, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian,
Swedish and Spanish, as the case may be. The selection of arbitral
awards covers a broad spectrum of commercial sectors: finance,
maritime, commodities and manufacturing, as well as a variety of
contract types such as consultancy, distributorship, foreign
investment and sales. The awards also examine many aspects of
procedure such as assignment and succession, jurisdiction,
determination of the applicable law (including lex mercatoria),
interim measures and the powers of arbitrators. ICSID, ICC and
Iran-US Claims Tribunal awards are included as well as awards from
German, Italian, Japanese and Russian arbitral institutions. The
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has a place in the
Yearbook for the first time in the form of a Decision on the place
of arbitration and Award on jurisdiction by an ad hoc tribunal
constituted under this Agreement and applying the UNCITRAL Rules.
Prominence is given to the reporting on the 1958 New York
Convention where 42 decisions from 15 jurisdictions comprising 13
countries, the Court of Justice of the European Communities and the
Full Tribunal of the Iran-US Claims Tribunal are included. Common
themes are the requirement of an arbitration agreement in writing,
the binding effect of arbitral awards, the role of EU procedural
and substantive law in arbitration, procedural flaws in the
arbitration which may constitute a violation of public policy,
sovereign immunity, and the balance of interests between finality
of awards and the illegality of the underlying contract. Several
decisions applying the 1961 European Convention and the 1975 Panama
Convention are also published. The Yearbook additionally publishes
a selection of leading court decisions from various countries which
will impact arbitration practice in general. This year's selection
includes decisions for eight countries and the Court of Justice of
the European Communities on such topics as interim measures, the
role of EU law, confidentiality, public policy and illegality, and
"unconscionable" arbitral clauses. Other features of the Yearbook
are the newest rules from the American Arbitration Association
(AAA), the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration
Commission (CIETAC) and the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC) and
the recently amended Supplementary Rules Governing the Taking of
Evidence in International Commercial Arbitration of the
International Bar Association with an Introduction by David Rivkin.
New or amended arbitration legislation is announced in Recent
Developments in Arbitration Law and Practice, with references to
the Yearbook's sister publication, the International Handbook on
Commercial Arbitration, where the full text of the legislation will
be published in English, along with a National Report setting out
the law and practice of arbitration in that country. The Yearbook
also provides a Bibliography, listing journals and announcing the
newest publications in the field of arbitration, including ADR.
The proceedings of ICCA's 1998 Paris Congress, hosted by the Comite
francais de l'Arbitrage. This Congress marked the 40th anniversary
of the 1958 New York Convention. Three working groups, made up of
international experts, professionals and practitioners in the field
of arbitration, examined the following topics: arbitration clauses
- achieving effectiveness; arbitration procedure - achieving
efficiency without sacrificing due process; and arbitration awards
- solving problems of enforcement.
This volume of the Yearbook reproduces in Part III A, which is
devoted to arbitration rules of international and national
institutions, new or amended international arbitration and
conciliation rules from the American Arbitration Association, the
Commercial Arbitration and Mediation Center for the Americas
(CAMCA), the International Court of Arbitration of the
International Chamber of Commerce and the Permanent Court of
Arbitration. The trend of offering expedited arbitration services
is represented in the rules for expedited arbitration of the
Stockholm Chamber of Commerce and the Japan Shipping Exchange.
UNCITRAL's latest contribution, "Notes on Organizing Arbitral
Proceedings", is also reproduced. Part IV on recent developments in
arbitration law and practice focuses on the new arbitration acts in
Brazil, Guatemala, Malta, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe, all
of which have been inspired by the UNCITRAL Model Law. A selection
of Arbitral Awards from a variety of arbitral institutions has been
compiled for this volume. Awards emanating from arbitral
institutions located in Paris, Hamburg, Milan, Rome, Stockholm and
Zurich, as well as awards made under the auspices of the ICC and
ICSID, are included. For the first time, the Yearbook also includes
two challenge decisions made under the UNCITRAL Rules by Appointing
Authorities. The collection of Arbitral Awards is completed by the
survey of awards made by the Iran-US Claims Tribunal, along with a
selection from these awards. Various categories of Court Decisions
are reported in the Yearbook. Part II - B reports on leading cases
which have a major impact on both national and international
practice. Part II - C focuses on Court Decisions applying the
UNCITRAL Model Law as reported in Case Law on UNCITRAL Texts
(CLOUT). In addition, a cumulative Index of Articles of CLOUT
decisions reported in Yearbook Volumes XIX through XXII is
provided. Part V contains Court Decisions applying the major
multilateral arbitration conventions. In this volume, more
decisions applying and interpreting the 1958 New York Convention
than ever before: 69 decisions from 19 countries are reported. A
"first" for the Yearbook is the new Part IV - D reporting two
decisions on the 1975 Inter-American Convention on International
Commercial Arbitration. The Yearbook concludes with a Bibliography
containing announcements of recent publications and current
periodicals in the field of arbitration and alternative dispute
resolution. The "Yearbook Commercial Arbitration" is an ICCA
(International Council for Commercial Arbitration) publication with
the assistance of the International Bureau of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration, The Hague.
This annual reference encompasses significant developments in the
field of international commercial arbitration. It contains arbitral
awards from various ad hoc and institutional tribunals which
address issues such as the applicable law, assignment, bribery,
copyright infringement and breach of contract. There are separate
sections devoted to new arbitral rules and laws, court decisions
relevant to arbitral practice, decisions applying the UNCITRAL
model law and those applying two of the major multilateral
arbitration conventions - the New York Convention 1958 and the
European Convention 1961. The text concludes with an annotated
bibliography of recent publications and current periodicals in the
fields of arbitration and alternative dispute resolution.
In ICCA's latest Congress Series, international experts,
professionals and practitioners in the field of arbitration put
forward answers to the challenge facing international arbitrators
to improve the efficiency and predictability of arbitration
proceedings. In order to present these topics coherently, the
organizers of ICCA's 12th International Arbitration Congress, held
in Vienna in November 1994, divided the forum into two working
groups: "Planning Efficient Arbitration Proceedings" and "The Law
Applicable in International Arbitration". Working Group I focused
on the arbitrator's ability to plan proceedings, using various
formal and informal methods and techniques. In particular,
attention was drawn to the UNCITRAL Draft Guidelines which provides
arbitrators with a written reminder of items to be covered while
planning proceedings. During debate, proponents emphasized the
"optional" character of the guidelines, to allay fears that more
efficiency would reduce the ability to solve disputes flexibly.
Working Group I also discussed means of improving the presentation
of evidence during proceedings. Working Group II faced the
complications arbitral tribunals may encounter when the law
applicable to the substance of a dispute and the law governing the
procedure are different. Attention was also directed toward three
other systems of law which may be relevant during the proceedings:
the law governing the capacity of the parties, the law applicable
to the arbitration agreement and the appropriate conflicts-of-law
rules to determine the substantive law. In general the reports of
both Working Groups expressed a desire for a more standardized and
international approach to arbitration proceedings and emphasized
the need to prevent parochial national preference from creating
unnecessary obstructions.
"The Yearbook Commercial Arbitration" has established its
reputation as a leading publication in the field of international
commercial arbitration. The publication reflects ICCA's goal to
promote arbitration as a flexible mechanism of dispute settlement
in the increasingly litiginous world of global trade. By sharing
the most up-to-date information on arbitral awards, court
decisions, arbitration rules and legislation, the yearbook offers
legal practitioners and scholars comprehensive documentation and
commentary on international commercial arbitration. This volume
distinguishes itself from previous volumes in its additional
coverage of arbitral decisions on domain name disputes from the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Arbitration and
Mediation Center and excerpts of 62 court decisions originating
from 10 countries applying and interpreting the 1958 New York
Convention.
This volume continues to report on current developments in the
field of international commercial arbitration. The yearbook has
maintained its original format and continues to publish arbitral
awards, both constitutional and ad hoc, new and amended rules of
arbitral institutions, and accounts of current developments in the
law and practice of commercial arbitration worldwide. The Yearbook
also includes broad coverage of court decisions applying the
UNCITRAL Model Law in International Commercial Arbitration, as well
as the major multilateral arbitration conventions: the 1958 New
York Convention, the 1961 European Convention, and the 1965
Washington Convention. Part II - A: Arbitral Awards, which is
supplemented by a subject index, contains ICSID, ICC and maritime
awards that range from topical issues such as the effects of the
1993 boycott of Kuwaiti and Iraqi oil products to classical
questions arising in arbitration, such as the application by
arbitrators of Conventions and mandatory law regarding issues of
public policy. Also included are awards of the Iran-US Claims
Tribunal dealing with issues of general interest, such as
expropriation, valuation, and standard of compensation, breach of
contract and force majeure as well as procedural questions arising
form the UNCITRAL rules as applied by the Tribunal. The 47 court
decisions contained in Part V - A on the 1958 New York Convention
reflect the increasing reliance on this tool for the enforcement of
arbitration agreements and awards. The "Commentary on the European
Convention on International Commercial Arbitration of 1961" by
Dominique T. Hascher contained in Part V - C, along with five court
decisions applying this convention, document the growing importance
of this international document. Also included are court decisions
of general interest to arbitration practice from England, France
and the Court of Justice of the EC; court decisions on the UNCITRAL
Model Law as reported in "Case Law on UNCITRAL Texts (CLOUT)"; new
arbitration rules of the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce, the Society
of Maritime Arbitrators, Inc., and the World Intellectual Property
Organization; updates on new arbitration legislation in Bahrain,
China, Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, Ivory Coast, Romania,
Singapore and Ukraine; up-to-date lists of Contracting States to
the New York, European and Washington Conventions; and a
bibliography of recent publications and current periodicals in the
field of arbitration and alternative dispute resolution.
For more than three decades, "Yearbook Commercial Arbitration" has
been the primary source of up-to-date information for arbitration
scholars and practitioners. With its reporting on developments in
the law and practice of international commercial arbitration, its
excerpts of arbitral awards and court decisions, and its commentary
on newly adopted or amended arbitration rules, Volume XXXI
continues the Yearbook's tradition of providing such topical
information as the following: the largest number of New York
Convention decisions ever collected in one volume of the Yearbook -
95 court decisions from 15 countries worldwide, including English
translations of decisions from Austria, Belgium, China, France,
Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain, giving the
reader access to material which might otherwise be inaccessible.
All the cases are indexed and linked to the General Editor's
published commentaries on the New York Convention, facilitating
research on any aspect of the Convention. It also includes
information about arbitral awards made under the auspices of the
International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of
Commerce (ICC), the German Maritime Arbitration Association, and
the Netherlands Arbitration Institute (NAI), as well as ad hoc
awards, dealing with procedural and substantive issues of general
interest to the business and legal communities; new and amended
rules adopted by the International Arbitral Centre of the Austrian
Federal Economic Chamber (the Vienna Rules), the International
Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), and the
International Commercial Arbitration Court (ICAC) of the Chamber of
Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation; and information on
arbitration legislation recently enacted in Austria, Cambodia,
Italy, and Malaysia. A new feature in this volume is a 'Digest of
Investment Treaty Decisions and Awards' containing a detailed list
of subject matters for more than 100 investment awards. A
bibliography and list of journals keep the reader up to date on
relevant literature. Edited by the International Council for
Commercial Arbitration (ICCA), the world's leading organization
representing practitioners and academics in the field, the Yearbook
is a vital resource for anyone involved in the practice and study
of international arbitration.
The Yearbook Commercial Arbitration continues its longstanding
commitment to serving as a primary resource for the international
arbitration community with reporting on arbitral awards and court
decisions applying the leading arbitration conventions, as well as
arbitration legislation and rules. Volume XXXIV provides: * A
selection of awards made under the auspices of, inter alia, the
International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), The German Arbitration
Institute (DIS) and the Netherlands Arbitration Institute (NAI), as
well as an ad hoc partial award rendered under the UNCITRAL
Arbitration Rules; * a selection of court decisions on different
topics that are relevant to the practice of (International)
arbitration; * Information on PR China, Germany, Italy, Japan,
Southern Africa, Spain, the United States and WIPO; * excerpts of
77 court decisions applying the 1958 New York Convention from 23
countries, including, for the first time, cases from Antigua and
Barbuda and Kenya; * decisions from Austria, Canada, Germany,
Greece, Hong Kong, India, Jordan, Kenya, the Russian Federation,
Singapore, Turkey and Venezuela reflecting the parallel application
of the UNCITRAL Model Law as adopted in these jurisdictions
together with the Convention; * cases from Austria, Brazil, PR
China, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Netherlands,
Netherlands Antilles, Russian Federation, Switzerland, Turkey and
Venezuela, all translated from their original language into
English; and, * an extensive Bibliography of recent books and
journals on arbitration, including this year general works on the
theory and practice of arbitration in China, England, France,
Germany, Hong Kong, Japan and The Netherlands, as well as
commentaries on the rules of the ICC, the LCIA, the NAI and the
Vienna International Arbitral Centre. The Yearbook is edited by the
International Council for Commercial Arbitration (ICCA), the
world's leading organization representing practitioners and
academics in the field, with the assistance of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration, The Hague. It is an essential tool for lawyers,
business people and scholars involved in the practice and study of
international arbitration.
Long established as the world's leading publication in the field of
international commercial arbitration, the Yearbook Commercial
Arbitration has, regularly since 1975, demonstrated the great
usefulness and flexibility of arbitration as a means of settling
disputes in the complex arena of world trade. The twenty-eight
volume like its predecessors, provides updated information on
arbitral awards, court decisions, arbitration rules and legislation
and includes: summaries and analyses of the year's important court
decisions applying the leading international arbitration
conventions: the 1958 New York Convention, the 1961 European
Convention and the 1975 Panama Convention; special sections
dedicated to extracts of recent arbitral awards and decisions from
the world's leading arbitral centers; court decisions on
arbitration from national courts worldwide; updated information on
arbitration rules and legislation; and a comprehensive updated
bibliography of books and journals on arbitration. In addition,
special features of this volume include: a consolidated commentary
for Volumes XXII-XXVII, written by the General Editor, commenting
on the interpretation application of the 1958 New York Convention
in more than 300 cases; excerpts of 54 recent court decisions
applying the 1958 New York Convention; a survey of changes in the
ICSID and ICSID Additional Facility Rules in force as of January
2003 (submitted by Antonio Parra, Deputy Secretary-General of
ICSID); extensive excerpts of the partial and final awards made
under the auspices of the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the
arbitration between private shareholders and the bank for
International Settlements. The Yearbook is edited by
theInternational Settlements. Council for Commercial Arbitration
(ICCA), the world's leading organization representing practitioners
and academics in the field. As always, this latest volume offers
vital information for international lawyers, business people,
academics and students with a stake in the practice of commercial
Volume XXXVII (2012) of the Yearbook again presents readers with a
selection of arbitral awards and court decisions made accessible by
translations, indices and categorized lists. Since Volume XXXV
(2010), the Yearbook's selection of arbitral awards and court
decisions is available in a combination of print edition and online
publishing. Arbitral awards continue to be published in print in
their entirety, as are Parts of the Yearbook providing various
information. Court decisions are presented at two levels of
consultation: a Summary of each decision, prefaced by a short
recap, is published in print; a detailed Excerpt of the decision is
available online at . A code provided with the Yearbook allows
readers to access the relevant Volume online, as well as the
preceding Volume. Readers who have purchased Volume XXXVII (2012)
can therefore access materials from both this Volume and Volume
XXXVI (2011).
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