Ethics in International Arbitration

Ethics in International Arbitration by Catherine Rogers, published by OUP Oxford in April 2014, is a comprehensive examination of the ethical challenges present in the field of international arbitration. This 352-page book addresses the complexities arising from the increasing diversity of parties, counsel, experts, and arbitrators involved in global trade, highlighting the inadequacy of informal social controls in the face of evolving formal procedures.
Readers will find a structured analysis divided into three parts, focusing on the pressing need for formal ethical regulations within the international arbitration system. The first part identifies the ethical dilemmas stemming from the current lack of regulation, while the second part proposes a theoretical framework for developing effective ethical rules. The final section outlines integrated mechanisms for enforcing these rules, providing a thorough exploration of ethics and professional responsibility in arbitration, negotiation, and mediation contexts.
Official synopsis Publisher
Although international arbitration is a remarkably resilient institution, many unresolved and largely unacknowledged ethical quandaries lurk below the surface. With the expansion of world trade, the pool of parties, counsel, experts and arbitrators has become more numerous and more diverse, such that informal social controls are no longer a sufficient substitute for formal ethical regulation. At the same time, the international arbitration system has veered sharply toward more formal and transparent procedures, meaning that ethical transgressions are bound to become more evident and less tolerable. Despite these clear signals, regulation of various actors in the system-arbitrators, lawyers, experts and arbitral institutions-has not evolved to keep apace of these needs. Ethics in International Arbitration provides a framework for developing much needed formal ethical rules and a reliable enforcement regime in the international arbitration system. Catherine Rogers accomplishes this goal in three parts. The first Part analyzes the underlying problems caused by the current lack of regulation and reveal how these problems affect modern international arbitration practice. The Second Part proposes a theoretical framework for resolving these conflicts so effective ethical rules can be developed to guide and regulate various participants’ conduct, and the third part proposes integrated mechanisms for enforcing ethical rules.
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