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Ethics in international arbitration / Catherine A. Rogers, Professor of Law and Paul & Marjorie Price Faculty Scholar, Penn State Law, Professor of Ethics, Regulation & the Rule of Law, Co-Director of the Institute for Ethics & Regulation Queen Mary, University of London.

By: Material type: TextPublication details: Oxford (UK) Oxford University Press 2014Edition: First editionDescription: xxii, 386 pages : illustrations ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9780195337693
  • 0195337697
  • 9780198713203
  • 0198713207
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 341.5 23
LOC classification:
  • KZ6115 .R64
Contents:
I. Mapping the terrain -- From an invisible college to an ethical No-Man's Land -- Arbitrators, barbers, and taxidermists -- Attorneys, barbarians, and guerrillas -- Experts, partisans, and hired guns -- Gamblers, loan sharks, and third-party funders -- II. Staking out theoretical boundaries and building the regime -- Chanticleer, the fox and self-regulation -- Ariadne's thread and the functional thesis -- Herodotian myths and the impartiality of arbitrators -- Duck-rabbits, a panel of monkeys, and the status of international arbitrators -- Castles in the air and the future of ethics in international arbitration.
Summary: Although international arbitration is a remarkably resilient institution, many unresolved and largely unacknowledged ethical quandaries lurk below the surface. This text provides a framework for developing much-needed formal ethical rules and a reliable enforcement regime in the international arbitration system--
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Books African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights Library KZ6115 .R64 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 1021304X

Includes bibliographical references and index.

I. Mapping the terrain -- From an invisible college to an ethical No-Man's Land -- Arbitrators, barbers, and taxidermists -- Attorneys, barbarians, and guerrillas -- Experts, partisans, and hired guns -- Gamblers, loan sharks, and third-party funders -- II. Staking out theoretical boundaries and building the regime -- Chanticleer, the fox and self-regulation -- Ariadne's thread and the functional thesis -- Herodotian myths and the impartiality of arbitrators -- Duck-rabbits, a panel of monkeys, and the status of international arbitrators -- Castles in the air and the future of ethics in international arbitration.

Although international arbitration is a remarkably resilient institution, many unresolved and largely unacknowledged ethical quandaries lurk below the surface. This text provides a framework for developing much-needed formal ethical rules and a reliable enforcement regime in the international arbitration system--

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