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China and International Commercial Dispute Resolution -

China and International Commercial Dispute Resolution

Qiao Liu, Wenhua Shan (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
368 Seiten
2015 | xiv, 354 pp.
Martinus Nijhoff (Verlag)
978-90-04-30672-1 (ISBN)
CHF 209,95 inkl. MwSt
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China and International Commercial Dispute Resolution is a unique collection of papers which deal expertly with legal issues arising from international commercial dispute resolution in China, utilizing a multiplicity of approaches including doctrinal, comparative, empirical, economic and legal analyses.
China and International Commercial Dispute Resolution presents important contributions from eminent legal scholars from Europe, the United States, Australia, South America, and China in a variety of areas of international commercial law with relevance to China. The authors provide expert analyses from a number of perspectives – doctrinal, comparative, empirical, economic, and legal – on an array of issues, private and public, involved in or arising from international commercial dispute resolution in China.

Professor Dr Qiao Liu, Ph.D., University of Oxford, is Associate Professor at TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland, Australia and Professor of Law at Xi’an Jiaotong University School of Law, China, Lee Kai Shing Visiting Professor at McGill University Faculty of Law, Visiting Scholar at East Asian Legal Studies of Harvard Law School and the founding Executive Deputy-Editor-in-Chief of The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law. He has published monographs and articles in such journals as the MLR and CLJ. Professor Dr Wenhua Shan, Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge, is the Ministry of Education Yangtze River Chair Professor of International Economic Law and the founding Dean of Xi'an Jiaotong University School of Law, Senior Fellow of Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, University of Cambridge, Professor of Law at the University of New South Wales and the founding Editor-in-Chief of The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law. He has published over ten monographs and numerous articles in such journals as the AJCL and EJIL Xiang Ren (Cheyenne), Xi'an Jiaotong University, is a Ph.D. Candidate at Xi'an Jiaotong University School of Law and an Editorial Assistant of The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law.

Notes on Contributors

1Introduction
Qiao Liu and Xiang Ren
Part I General Issues in International Commercial Arbitration
2Specific Performance in International Arbitration
Ewan McKendrick and Iain Maxwell
2.1The meaning of ‘specific performance’
2.2Common law and civil law
2.3Specific performance in an arbitral context
2.4Xiamen Xinjingdi Group Ltd v Eton Properties Ltd
3EU Law in Chinese International Commercial Arbitration
Jürgen Basedow
3.1Arbitration in the Law of the European Union
3.2Arbitral Proceedings and State Courts in the European Union
3.3EU Law and the Merits of International Arbitration Proceedings
3.4Arbitration Panels and the European Court of Justice
3.5Conclusion
4Using Soft Law in International Commercial Contract Arbitration
Larry A. DiMatteo
4.1Introduction
4.2Soft Law and International Commercial Arbitration
4.3Normative Power of Soft Law
4.4Types of Soft Law
4.5Interpretive Methodologies
4.6Soft Law Trumps Hard Law: Private Customary International Law
4.7Hard and Soft Law in International Commercial Disputes
4.8Conclusion
5Independence and Impartiality of Arbitrators: A Comparative Perspective
Carlos Matheus López
5.1Factors in Selection of Arbitrators
5.2Background
5.3Independence and Impartiality
5.4Duty of Disclosure
5.5Efforts to Systematize and Limits
5.6Practical Analysis Factors
5.7Means to Ensure Arbitrator Independence and Impartiality
5.8Practical Steps to Select a Party-nominated Arbitrator
5.9Pre-appointment Interview
5.10Some Criteria to Challenge an Arbitrator
Part II Specific Issues in International Commercial Arbitration
6China and Foreign Direct Investment: Looking Ahead
Leon Trakman
6.1Introduction
6.2Investment Claims and China
6.3ISA Claims by Chinese Investors Abroad
6.4ISA Claims Brought Against China
6.5Chinese Arbitrators
6.6Withdrawing From ISA?
6.7A “China-made” Investment Jurisprudence?
6.8China’s Distinctive History of “Liberalization”
6.9China’s “Liberalization” of its BITs
6.10The History of Chinese BITS
6.11Modelling China’s Model BIT
6.12“Alternative” Dispute Resolution
6.13Conclusion
7Arbitrability of Company Law Disputes
Andrew Johnston
7.1Introduction
7.2Arbitration under the statutory contract
7.3Under shareholder agreements
7.4Actions by the company against its directors
7.5Derivative action by minority shareholder against directors
7.6Unfair prejudice applications
7.7Conclusion
8Rules of Evidence in CIETAC International Arbitration
Song Lu
8.1Introduction
8.2General Approaches towards Disclosure and Investigation of facts
8.3PRC Civil Procedure Law
8.4Current PRC Statute on Rules of Evidence in Arbitration
8.5Rules of Evidence Agreed by the Parties
8.6Rules of Evidence for China – CIETAC Evidence Guidelines
8.7Conclusion
Part III Issues in International Commercial Law and Non-Arbitration Dispute Resolution
9A Critique of the European Contract Code ‘Project’
Roger Halson
9.1Introduction
9.2The General Background to Codification
9.3Process and the creation of the CESL
9.4Further outline of the CESL including available remedies
9.5Key Arguments for Reform
9.6Further Critique
9.7Conclusion
10CISG in Chinese Courts: The First Look
Qiao Liu and Xiang Ren
10.1Introduction
10.2Applicability of CISG in Chinese Courts
10.3The Survey
10.4Conclusion
11State-owned Enterprises in the WTO Law: An Analysis of United States–Definitive Anti-dumping and Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China
Ming Du
11.1Introduction
11.2State-owned Enterprises in the Law of World Trade Organization
11.3The US- Antidumping and Countervailing Duties Case
11.4Conclusion
12Judicial Mediation: A Behavioural Law and Economics Perspective
Qi Zhou
12.1Introduction
12.2Mediation and Judicial Mediation
12.3Judicial Mediation As Solutions
12.4Evaluating the Role of Judicial Mediation
12.5Evaluating the Efficiency of Judicial Mediation
12.6Conclusion

INDEX

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Silk Road Studies in International Economic Law ; 2
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 694 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern Allgemeines / Lexika
Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Wirtschaftsrecht
ISBN-10 90-04-30672-2 / 9004306722
ISBN-13 978-90-04-30672-1 / 9789004306721
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