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Lex Mercatoria and Arbitration Revised Edition

Lex Mercatoria and Arbitration Revised Edition

Thomas E. Carbonneau

Price: $115.00 350 pages. 1 Hardcover Volume. Bibliography. Index.Published February 1999.
ISBN-13: 978-1-57823-023-5 / ISBN-10: 1-57823-023-3

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Book Overview

Chapter One - A Practical Assessment of Arbitral Dispute Resolution

  • Lawrence W. Newman, Chairman of the Litigation Department, Baker & McKenzie, New York

Chapter Two - A Definition of and Perspective Upon the 
                           Lex Mercatoria Debate

  • Thomas Carbonneau

Chapter Three - The Remaking of Arbitration: Design and Destiny

  • Thomas Carbonneau

Chapter Four - The Lex Maritima

  • William Tetley, Q.C., Counsel, Langlois Gaudreau, Montreal; Professor of Law, McGill University; Chairman of the Executive Committee of Maritime Arbitrators (AMAC); President of the International Maritime Arbitration Association (IMAQ) in Paris; Vice President of the Comite Maritime International (CMI) in Brussels

Chapter Five - The "New Law" Merchant and the "Old:" 
                            Sources, Content, and Legitimacy

  • Harold J. Berman, Woodruff Professor of Law, Emory University; Ames Professor of Law, Emeritus, Harvard University and Felix J. Dasser, Homburger Rechtsanwalte, Zurich

Chapter Six - Lex Mercatoria: An Arbitrator’s View

  • Andreas F. Lowenfeld, Charles l. Denison Professor of Law, New York University

Chapter Seven - Proper Choice of Law and the Lex Mercatoria Arbitralis

  • Hans Smit, Stanley F. Fuld Professor of Law and Former Director, Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law, Columbia University

Chapter Eight - The Myth of the Lex Mercatoria and State Contracts

  • Georges R. Delaume, Counsel, Curtis Mallet-Prevost, Colt& Mosle, Washington, DC; Former Senior Legal Advisor, International Centre for Investment Disputes

Chapter Nine - The Enigma Of the Lex Mercatoria

  • Keith Highet, Partner, McDermott Will & Emery, Washington DC

Chapter Ten - Control Mechanisms in the Development of 
                          a Modern Lex Mercatoria

  • William W. Park, Counsel, Ropes & Gray, Boston; Professor of Law. Boston University, Vice President, London Court of International Arbitration

Chapter Eleven - The Vienna Sales Convention and the Lex Mercatoria

  • Bernard Audit, Professor of Law, Universite Pantheon - Assas (Paris II)

Chapter Twelve - Assessing Arbitral Autonomy in European Statutory Law

  • Ulrich Drobnig, Director and Professor, Max-Planck Institute, Hamburg

Chapter Thirteen - United States Participation in Transnational Lawmaking

  • Peter H. Pfund, Assitant Legal Advisor for Private international Law, U.S. Department of State

Chapter Fourteen - Arbitral Autonomy and National Sovereign Authority 
                                    in Latin America

  • José Luis Siqueiros, Counsel, Barrera Siquerious y Torres Landa S.C., Mexico City; President, Interamerican Juridical Committee, Organization of American States

Chapter Fifteen - Codification of Commercial Practice in Eastern European
                                Countries: Lex Mercatoria from a Hungarian Perspective

  • Ferenc Mádl, Professor of Law, Eotovos Lorand University (Budapest)

Chapter Sixteen - UNIDROIT Principles and the Lex Mercatoria

  • Michael Joachim Bonell, Professor of Comparative and International Trade Law, University of Rome; Legal Consultant to UNIDROIT; Italian Delegate to UNCITRAL

Chapter Seventeen - The Future of the Law Governing 
                                        the International Arbitral Process

  • Vratislav Pechota, Professor of Law and Former Assistant Director, Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law, Columbia University

Afterword - The Lex Mercatoria and the Conflict of Laws

  • Friedrich K. Juenger, Professor of Law, University of California (Davis), Visiting Professor of Comparative Law, Tulane University

Book Overview


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