Privacy Information We use cookies to show external content, to personalize your display, to be able to offer functions for social media and to analyze the access to our website. Information about your use of our website may be passed on to our partners for external content, social media, advertising and analysis. Our partners may combine this information with other data that you have provided or that they have collected as part of your use of the services. You can either agree to all external services and associated cookies, or only to those that are absolutely necessary for the website to function correctly. Please note that if you choose the second option, not all content may be displayed. |
x |
you need the free eBook reader Adobe Digital Editions (download). After purchasing an eBook you will receive a download link. This link can only be used once and loses its validity after the download. In order to use an eBook on several devices (PC, laptop, tablet) and also after a device change without problems, please create an account with Adobe ADE. Of course, it is also possible to use the book without an account, but then you can only use the book on the device on which you have downloaded it. It is not possible to take the book to another device without an account.
Arbitration / ADR / Mediation | ||||
ICC Arbitration Rules 2021 & Mediation Rules 2014 Pub. No. 892Arb | Language EN | Download | |||
Download | ||||
ICC Schiedsgerichtsordnung 2021 & Mediations-Regeln 2014 Pub. No. 892Arb-D | Language DE | Download | |||
Download | ||||
Economic sanctions, exchange and export control regulations adopted by countries and regional organisations are increasingly interconnected with arbitral proceedings worldwide. Their overriding mandatory nature with respect to certain territories is unquestionable. But does that make them relevant, or binding, on international arbitral tribunals sitting outside of these territories? Party submissions arguing bindingness or irrelevance, vary greatly, whether as a result of ignorance or unease, or as a deliberate attempt to mislead the tribunal. In turn, arbitral awards show no uniform position among tribunals. Scarce institutional guidance exists. Until now. In this Institute Dossier, leading arbitrators, counsel, business decision makers, and diplomats—the very drafters of sanctions regulations—discuss their conflicting expectations of how or if mandatory rules pertaining to sanctions should be complied with. This must-have publication is destined to enrich the database of international arbitrators, counsel, business executives, law enforcement agencies and anyone else involved in strategic decision-making. | ||||