The role of arbitration in shipping law / edited by Miriam Goldby, Loukas Mistelis.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, c2016.Description: xxv, 295 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:- 9780198757948 (hbk)
- 343.09/6 23
- K2405 .S55R65 2016
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Books | North South University Library | Non-fiction | General Stacks | K2405.S55R65 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 46640 |
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K2400.S77 2009 Research and practice in international commercial arbitration : | K2400.S77 2009 Research and practice in international commercial arbitration : | K2405.S55R65 2016 The role of arbitration in shipping law / | K2405.S55R65 2016 The role of arbitration in shipping law / | K3165.O94 2012 The Oxford handbook of comparative constitutional law / | K3230.G66 2021 The refugee in international law / | K3240.H67 2019 Humanity of justice / |
"This new work... is based on papers presented at the inaugural International Shipping Law Roundtable organized by the CCLS in 2014"--Page v.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Part 1. How practices become norms : the continued development of shipping law -- Part 2. To arbitrate or not to arbitrate? the grey area of contracts of carriage -- Part 3. Where to arbitrate? distinctive features of maritime arbitral seats -- Part 4. The role of arbitrators in the development of shipping law -- Index.
The financial crisis of 2007-08 saw a marked increase in global shipping disputes that is still being felt today. In recent decades, arbitration has emerged as the dominant choice of dispute resolution in the global shipping industry, with the establishment of major maritime arbitration centres in London and New York, and the recent emergence of new centres such as Singapore and China. At the same time, the immense advances that have been made and continue to be made in engineering, technology, and communications have led to the emergence of innumerable new trade practices, common understandings, and usages within which goods are carried by sea across the world, but which, because of the widespread use of alternative fora for dispute resolution, may be invisible to and unrecognized by domestic laws. This book asks: What are the implications of widespread use of arbitration for the continued development of shipping law? Are national laws on shipping destined to become ossified and obsolete? Is a new lex maritima emerging? And, most importantly, what is the role of the arbitral process in the evolution of shipping law? --Book jacket.
Law
Md. Abdul Hakim.
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