Titre : |
The Law and Practice of United States Arbitration |
Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
Auteurs : |
Thomas E.CARBONNEAU, Auteur |
Editeur : |
JurisNet LLC |
Année de publication : |
2020 |
Collection : |
Seventh Edition |
Importance : |
604 pages |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
8032919996824 |
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Catégories : |
Règlement des différends
|
Mots-clés : |
law practice United States arbitration |
Index. décimale : |
000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue |
Résumé : |
The Law and Practice of United States Arbitration is a comprehensive treatise about the development and practice of arbitration law in the United States. It addresses in detail the recourse to arbitration in domestic matters -- employment, labor, consumer transactions, and business -- and its use in the resolution of international commercial claims. It covers all of the major subject areas in the field and provides practical advice as well as an easy-to-read, clear discussion of the relevant case law. It represents a masterful synthesis of the entire body of arbitration law. It discusses basic concepts and doctrines, the FAA, freedom of contract in arbitration, arbitrability, the enforcement of awards, the use of arbitration in consumer and employment matters, institutional arbitration, and the drafting of arbitration agreements. It describes the federalization of the law and growing judicial objections to the use of adhesive arbitration agreements in the consumer context. A special edition of The Law and Practice of Arbitration was adapted and issued as Volume 31 of Moore's Federal Practice, one of the nation's leading treatises on federal courts and procedure. Moore's Federal Practice, published by LexisNexis, is one of the most cited texts in the legal world with over 50,000 citing opinions since it was first published in 1938.
The Seventh Edition of Law and Practice of United States Arbitration brings the existing material completely up-to-date and takes into account and provides thorough commentary on SCOTUS’ latest decisions. It provides a unique perspective into the value of arbitration for American society, the American legal system, and global commerce. Although the attachment to political convictions has mired arbitration into an unproductive debate in adhesive arbitration, that aspect of the use of arbitration has nothing to do with its larger mission. Arbitration is unique in the experience of American law because it actually works and achieves its aims. It is imbued in the Western democratic tradition and in that sense may be a difficult fit in other regions of the world. Finally, the support from national High Courts for arbitration is a vital part of the success of the process. Arbitration in the United States, England, and France would not have progressed and developed so well without the unqualified support of the judiciary. |
The Law and Practice of United States Arbitration [texte imprimé] / Thomas E.CARBONNEAU, Auteur . - JurisNet LLC, 2020 . - 604 pages. - ( Seventh Edition) . ISSN : 8032919996824 Langues : Anglais ( eng)
Catégories : |
Règlement des différends
|
Mots-clés : |
law practice United States arbitration |
Index. décimale : |
000 - pas d'indexation décimale connue |
Résumé : |
The Law and Practice of United States Arbitration is a comprehensive treatise about the development and practice of arbitration law in the United States. It addresses in detail the recourse to arbitration in domestic matters -- employment, labor, consumer transactions, and business -- and its use in the resolution of international commercial claims. It covers all of the major subject areas in the field and provides practical advice as well as an easy-to-read, clear discussion of the relevant case law. It represents a masterful synthesis of the entire body of arbitration law. It discusses basic concepts and doctrines, the FAA, freedom of contract in arbitration, arbitrability, the enforcement of awards, the use of arbitration in consumer and employment matters, institutional arbitration, and the drafting of arbitration agreements. It describes the federalization of the law and growing judicial objections to the use of adhesive arbitration agreements in the consumer context. A special edition of The Law and Practice of Arbitration was adapted and issued as Volume 31 of Moore's Federal Practice, one of the nation's leading treatises on federal courts and procedure. Moore's Federal Practice, published by LexisNexis, is one of the most cited texts in the legal world with over 50,000 citing opinions since it was first published in 1938.
The Seventh Edition of Law and Practice of United States Arbitration brings the existing material completely up-to-date and takes into account and provides thorough commentary on SCOTUS’ latest decisions. It provides a unique perspective into the value of arbitration for American society, the American legal system, and global commerce. Although the attachment to political convictions has mired arbitration into an unproductive debate in adhesive arbitration, that aspect of the use of arbitration has nothing to do with its larger mission. Arbitration is unique in the experience of American law because it actually works and achieves its aims. It is imbued in the Western democratic tradition and in that sense may be a difficult fit in other regions of the world. Finally, the support from national High Courts for arbitration is a vital part of the success of the process. Arbitration in the United States, England, and France would not have progressed and developed so well without the unqualified support of the judiciary. |
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