Date: Friday, February 26, 2010
The Practitioner's Handbook on International Commercial
Arbitration (edited by Frank-Bernd Weigand - Oxford University
Press (OUP)) provides concise country reports on important
jurisdictions for international arbitral proceedings, as well as
commentaries on well-known arbitration rules which are frequently
incorporated in international legal agreements. Most international
commercial contracts now include an arbitration clause as an
alternative to resolving disputes in the state courts.
This second edition of the Practitioner's Handbook
includes newly updated country chapters, expanded international
coverage and commentary on the most important arbitration rules
worldwide.
It is written by world-leading arbitration practitioners and
academics and combines a practical approach with in-depth legal
research and analysis of important national and international case
law.
The book is unique in its coverage, providing uniformly designed
country reports and thorough commentaries on internationally
recognized arbitration rules in just one volume. There are
individual chapters for the following countries: Austria, Belgium,
China & Hong Kong, England, France, Germany, Italy,
Netherlands, Singapore, Sweden, Switzerland, USA. Each country
report covers: jurisdiction, the tribunal, arbitration procedure,
the award, amendments and challenge to the award, liability of
arbitrators and enforcement of national awards; and provides
details of national arbitration laws, arbitral institutions in the
jurisdiction, model arbitration clauses and a bibliography,
including a list of key judicial decisions.
Miranda Karali, who has handled numerous arbitrations in her
career, contributes the chapter on English arbitration, in which
the essential elements of arbitration in England are set out in a
clear and comprehensive manner.
The first edition was reviewed as "an outstanding book" and "an
extremely useful tool". The work is an indispensable one-stop
reference point for lawyers drafting international arbitration
clauses or handling arbitration proceedings in different
countries.
Visit
http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199534869.do for
more information.