"A Sure and Expedited Resolution of Disputes": The Federal Arbitration Act and the One-Year Requirement for Summary Confirmation of Arbitration Awards.
Case Western Reserve Law Review 2010, Spring, 60, 3
-
- € 2,99
-
- € 2,99
Publisher Description
INTRODUCTION Arbitration is a "highly favored" mode of dispute resolution throughout the American judicial system. (1) Generally, arbitration presents an opportunity for parties to settle their differences using an independent third-party arbitrator. (2) The arbitrator serves as the trier of fact, and conducts hearings in lieu of a judicial proceeding. (3) As a result, arbitration offers disputing parties "speedy and inexpensive trial[s] before specialists," while also "eas[ing] the workload of the courts." (4)
More Books by Case Western Reserve Law Review
How Judges Think (Book Review)
2009
Who's Afraid of Philanthrocapitalism?
2011
Diachronic Constitutionalism: A Remedy for the Court's Originalist Fixation.
2010
When Romer Met Feeney: Why the Second Sentence of the Ohio Marriage Amendment Violates Equal Protection.
2011
From the Bottle to the Grave: Realizing a Human Right to Breastfeeding Through Global Health Policy.
2010
Institutional Investors and Their Role in Corporate Governance: Reflections by a "Recovering" Corporate Governance Lawyer (Institutional Investors in Corporate Governance: Heroes Or Villains)
2009