Description:
Reforming Arbitration Reform: Emerging Voices, New Strategies and Evolving Values
Edited by Crina Baltag & Mark Feldman The legitimacy of international arbitration is being called into question. Arbitration is now subject to a multitude of regulatory sources and critical voices that seem to compromise the core interests of arbitration users and the arbitration community. This comprehensive discussion of ongoing and emerging reform efforts in both commercial and investment arbitration provides a thorough examination of how evolving values of diversity, inclusiveness, and sustainability are impacting the very nature of the field. Capturing the imperative need to critically consider how these new strategies and voices can lead to a new age of international arbitration, more than thirty well-known practitioners and academics offer invaluable perspectives on such aspects of the subject as the following:- conflicts of interest and ethical dilemmas;
- gender diversity;
- alleged instances of judicial overreach;
- third-party funders;
- role of professional organizations;
- intersections between investment law and race, environmental protection, and indigenous peoples;
- role of developing states; and
- increasing importance of regionalism.