The purpose of this website, sponsored by the leading arbitration law firm Aceris Law, is to provide free access to useful arbitration information and international arbitration resources in multiple languages, in order to make information about the leading form of international dispute resolution readily available to businesses, lawyers, in-house counsel, government officials, students and academics alike. A variety of free arbitration resources are provided, including an arbitration search engine that searches all leading publicly-available arbitration legal resources for documents or information, tools to find international arbitrators, tips on drafting arbitration clauses, model Requests for Arbitration and model Answers to Requests for Arbitration, a collection of obscure domestic arbitration laws and a variety of other arbitration resources. Links to the website’s main resources are found below. You may also use the website’s search form to search for arbitration information.
International arbitration is the leading form of international dispute resolution between businesses of different nationalities, as well as between foreign investors and States. It is a consensual, neutral, binding, private and enforceable means of international dispute resolution, which is typically faster and less expensive than domestic court proceedings. It is sometimes called a hybrid form of international dispute resolution, since it blends elements of civil law and common law procedure, while allowing parties an opportunity to design the procedural rules under which their dispute will be resolved.
Companies frequently include international arbitration agreements in their commercial contracts with businesses located in other States, so that if a dispute arises they are obligated to arbitrate before neutral arbitrators rather than to pursue litigation before a foreign court. A relatively recent phenomenon, investor-State arbitration concerns arbitration proceedings by foreign investors against States on the basis of bilateral or multilateral investment treaties, or domestic laws providing consent to arbitration.
Thanks to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of 1958, the awards of international arbitrators can be readily enforced in over three-quarters of the countries of the world, providing one of key advantages of arbitration as compared to domestic litigation to resolve international disputes.
- Answer To Request For Arbitration (Models)
- Arbitral Institutions and Arbitration Courts
- Arbitration Blog
- Arbitration Dictionary
- Arbitration Laws of the World
- Arbitration Search Engine
- Arbitration Time Limits
- Bilateral Investment Treaties
- Cost Of International Arbitration
- International Arbitration Conferences
- International Arbitration Procedure (Duration Estimator)
- International Arbitrators (Where To Find)
- Investment Arbitration
- Legal Directories for Lawyers in International Arbitration
- Model Arbitration Clauses
- Reducing The Cost Of International Arbitration
- Request For Arbitration (Models)
- Researching International Arbitration Law And Doctrine
- Third Party Funders For International Arbitration
- What Is International Arbitration?