ABSTRACT

This book tackles one of the most challenging fields of research and practice in the current global trade environment: integrating doctrines of private and public law for the purpose of international commerce and trade.

Traditional concepts of obligatory and proprietary claims and rights reach their limits when placed within an international context of litigation funding, liability and securitisation. Across disciplines, scholars and practitioners are seeking new ways of expanding and reconnecting novel products and services such as data; and the use of international dispute settlement with indispensable constitutional values and democratic processes is also growing. This book combines contributions on current issues in commercial contract and contract law, making an important contribution to the areas of substantive contract law and arbitration procedure that connect issues across disciplines. Exploring both substantive and procedural laws, the book explores unfair terms in non-consumer contracts, which is complemented by a broader contextual discussion of the regulation of platform operators in the European Union; while a discussion of the procedural role of public reporting of investment arbitration awards by the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) expands on the procedural aspects of arbitration within the wider context of the rule of law debate.

Debating policy issues in general private law reform, and including a juxtaposition of a traditionalist continuation-oriented approach and a call for radical reform of entrenched and outmoded private law concepts to suit global commerce, this book will be of interest to students, academics and practitioners working in the area of commercial contract law and arbitration.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Commercial contracts and arbitration at the London Centre for Commercial and Financial Law

part I|109 pages

Contracts in Arbitration and Assetisation

chapter 2|15 pages

Contractual Claims Versus Treaty Claims in Investor-State Disputes

Do Umbrella Clauses Have a Future?

chapter 3|32 pages

Investment Arbitration and the Rule of Law

How Transparency Impacts on Domestic Accountability

chapter 4|27 pages

Picking Up the Tab

Monetising Arbitral Claims and Awards

chapter 5|33 pages

Expropriation of Arbitral Awards

Contextualising the Indian Practice Vis-À-Vis the Antrix-Devas Dispute

part II|123 pages

Contract Governance and Assetisation

chapter 6|54 pages

Business Law in Europe after Brexit

The Need for Legal Transnationalisation in the International Marketplace and the Example of International Assignments

chapter 7|17 pages

The ‘Ownership’ of Personal Data