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Mikael Schinazi

The Three Ages of International Commercial Arbitration

The Three Ages of International Commercial Arbitration

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  • More about The Three Ages of International Commercial Arbitration

This book explores the evolution of international commercial arbitration, identifying three periods: the Age of Aspirations, the Age of Institutionalization, and the Age of Autonomy. It argues that the history of international commercial arbitration has oscillated between renewal and anxiety, with new approaches and institutions developed during periods of renewal but reined in during periods of anxiety.

Format: Hardback
Length: 400 pages
Publication date: 16 December 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press


Drawing on a wide range of previously unpublished sources, this unique history of international commercial arbitration in the modern era identifies three periods in its development: the Age of Aspirations (c. 1780–1920), the Age of Institutionalization (1920s–1950s), and the Age of Autonomy (1950s–present). Mikaël Schinazi analyzes the key features of each period, arguing that the history of international commercial arbitration has oscillated between moments of renewal and anxiety. During periods of renewal, new approaches, instruments, and institutions were developed to carry international commercial arbitration forward. These developments were then reined in during periods of anxiety, for fear that international arbitration might be overstepping its bounds. The resulting tension between renewal and anxiety is a key thread running through the evolution of international commercial arbitration. This book fills a key gap in the scholarship for anyone interested in the fields of international arbitration, legal history, and international law.

Drawing on a wide range of previously unpublished sources, this unique history of international commercial arbitration in the modern era identifies three periods in its development: the Age of Aspirations (c. 1780–1920), the Age of Institutionalization (1920s–1950s), and the Age of Autonomy (1950s–present). Mikaël Schinazi analyzes the key features of each period, arguing that the history of international commercial arbitration has oscillated between moments of renewal and anxiety. During periods of renewal, new approaches, instruments, and institutions were developed to carry international commercial arbitration forward. These developments were then reined in during periods of anxiety, for fear that international arbitration might be overstepping its bounds. The resulting tension between renewal and anxiety is a key thread running through the evolution of international commercial arbitration. This book fills a key gap in the scholarship for anyone interested in the fields of international arbitration, legal history, and international law.

Weight: 702g
Dimension: 159 x 236 x 30 (mm)
ISBN-13: 9781108835176

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