The notion of mandatory rules of law has long been of interest in private international law. It is no wonder that the subject has also emerged as something of a preoccupation of those who are involved in the world of international commercial arbitration. As both legal academics and international arbitrators, the editors of this book took a keen interest in how mandatory rules might “fit” into the international arbitration picture. To better understand the phenomenon of mandatory rules (and to gauge whether its importance might possibly even be exaggerated in the international arbitral context), the editors convened at Columbia Law School at a workshop under the joint auspices of Columbia and the School of International Arbitration at Queen Mary University of London. The workshop gathered a small number of leading academics and practitioners to consider whether the notion of mandatory rules of law has a place in international arbitration and, if so, how it might best be accommodated.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Bermann & Mistelis: Mandatory Rules in International Arbitration
George A. Bermann (Columbia Univ. - Law) & Loukas Mistelis (Queen Mary, Univ. of London - Law) have published Mandatory Rules in International Arbitration (Juris Publishing 2011). The table of contents is available here. Here's the abstract: