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Stockholm Arbitration Report (SAR) - (Individual Back Volumes)
Stockholm Arbitration Report (SAR) - (Individual Back Issue)
Preview Page SAR 2001 - 2
While the Rules of the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of
Commerce (SCC Rules) have been regularly modernised over the years,
and as a result have become more extensive, they do not, as in fact very
few institutional rules do, contain much information concerning the
specifics of the day-to-day management of cases. The following is
therefore intended to shed some light on how the rules are put into practice
by the board and by the secretariat of the Arbitration Institute of the
Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC Institute).
As any practitioner knows, the number of variations in case management
are as many as there are cases. The below should therefore not be seen as a
blue-print on how all cases under the SCC Rules are or should be
administered, but rather an example of what it might look like if we would
assemble all cases and from this try to formulate a general picture.
I. INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK AND TOOLS
The SCC Institute is an independent entity within the Stockholm Chamber
of Commerce. As indicated above, it has its own board and the decisions
of the board of the Institute are not subject to review by the Chamber. The
board of the SCC Institute has six members who are appointed for a period
of three years by the board of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce. The
board of the SCC Institute is presently chaired by Justice Leif Thorsson of
Sweden’s Supreme Court.
The day-to-day work of the Institute is carried out by the secretariat, under
the supervision of its secretary general, MrUlf Franke. Mr Franke has a
solid experience in the field of international commercial arbitration,
having headed the SCC secretariat for more than 25 years. He is also
holding the positions as secretary general of the International Council for
Commercial Arbitration (ICCA) and president of the International
Federation of Commercial Arbitration Institutions (IFCAI).
The immediate responsibility for performing the functions of the
secretariat under the SCC Rules in each case falls on the three “divisions”
of the secretariat. Each division consists of one counsel, being a lawyer,
and one assistant. Counsel and assistants work in close co-operation,
Annette Magnusson, Assistant Secretary General, Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm
Chamber of Commerce