Arbitration: Difference between revisions

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(Connect with international trade context. Sources - linked pages, Lexis https://www.lexisnexis.co.uk/legal/glossary/arbitrator and Cornell https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/arbitrator)
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It is also possible to appoint a panel of arbitrators, usually three, to work together on a single dispute.
It is also possible to appoint a panel of arbitrators, usually three, to work together on a single dispute.
Many arbitrators are legally qualified and experienced, especially in more complex cases.
However, depending on the jurisdiction, this is not necessarily a strict requirement, if the arbitrator are suitably experienced in dispute resolution.





Latest revision as of 15:45, 26 June 2024

Law.

Arbitration is the determining of a dispute using an independent arbitrator, rather than the courts.

For example, international trade disputes may be the subject of arbitration facilitated through the International Chamber of Commerce's International Court of Arbitration.


In arbitration, the parties to a dispute agree to the appointment of an independent arbitrator, by whose decision they agree to be bound.

It is also possible to appoint a panel of arbitrators, usually three, to work together on a single dispute.


See also