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    Ethics in international arbitration / Catherine A. Rogers, Professor of Law and Paul & Marjorie Price Faculty Scholar, Penn State Law, Professor of Ethics, Regulation & the Rule of Law, Co-Director of the Institute for Ethics & Regulation Queen Mary, University of London.

    • Title:Ethics in international arbitration / Catherine A. Rogers, Professor of Law and Paul & Marjorie Price Faculty Scholar, Penn State Law, Professor of Ethics, Regulation & the Rule of Law, Co-Director of the Institute for Ethics & Regulation Queen Mary, University of London.
    •    
    • Author/Creator:Rogers, Catherine A., author.
    • Published/Created:Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2014.
    • Holdings

       
    • Library of Congress Subjects:International commercial arbitration--Moral and ethical aspects.
      Arbitrators--Legal status, laws, etc.
      Legal ethics.
    • Edition:First edition.
    • Description:xxii, 386 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
    • Summary:Although international arbitration is a remarkably resilient institution, many unresolved and largely unacknowledged ethical quandaries lurk below the surface. This text provides a framework for developing much-needed formal ethical rules and a reliable enforcement regime in the international arbitration system-- Source other than the Library Congress.
    • Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
    • ISBN:9780195337693 (hbk.)
      0195337697 (hbk.)
      9780198713203 (pbk.)
      0198713207 (pbk.)
    • Contents:Machine generated contents note: A. Thesis and themes
      B. Terminology
      C. Methodology
      D. Overview of the argument
      E. Conclusion
      I. MAPPING THE TERRAIN
      1. From an Invisible College to an Ethical No-Man's Land
      A. early modern international arbitration system
      B. Modern international arbitration
      C. Globalization of the legal profession
      D. Regulation of transnational law practice
      E. Regulation of attorneys in international arbitration
      F. Conclusion
      2. Arbitrators, Barbers, and Taxidermists
      A. Arbitrator selection and the marketplace for arbitrator services
      B. Sources of international arbitrators' ethical duties
      C. International arbitrators' substantive ethical obligations
      D. Conclusion
      3. Attorneys, Barbarians, and Guerrillas
      A. Counsel ethics in international arbitration proceedings
      B. National differences in ethical rules
      C. Internationalization and enforcement
      D. Conclusion
      4. Experts, Partisans, and Hired Guns
      A. Comparative differences in expert witnessing
      B. Expert witnesses in international arbitration
      C. Procedural reforms and the panda's thumb
      D. Conclusion
      5. Gamblers, Loan Sharks, and Third-Party Funders
      A. Definitions and mechanics
      B. Funders and other participants in international arbitration
      C. Regulation of third-party funding in international arbitration
      D. Conclusion
      II. STAKING OUT THEORETICAL BOUNDARIES AND BUILDING THE REGIME
      6. Chanticleer, the Fox, and Self-Regulation
      A. Denning self-regulation
      B. Self-regulation in international arbitration
      C. Conclusion
      7. Ariadne's Thread and the Functional Thesis
      A. theory of professional ethics
      B. Functional Thesis as a prescriptive tool
      C. Conclusion
      8. Herodotian Myths and the Impartiality of Arbitrators
      A. myth of the 'non-humanness of judges'
      B. new role and new ethics of investment arbitrators
      C. Impartiality obligations of party-appointed arbitrators
      D. Reforming and refining the selection process
      E. Conclusion
      9. Duck-Rabbits, a Panel of Monkeys, and the Status of International Arbitrators
      A. Competing models of international arbitration
      B. Squinting hard to see arbitrators' duality
      C. Conclusion
      10. Castles in the Air and the Future of Ethics in International Arbitration
      A. future of international arbitration
      B. future of ethics in international arbitration
      C. future of ethical self-regulation.
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