ICA AND THE WRITING REQUIREMENT: FOLLOWING MODERN TRENDS TOWARDS LIBERALIZATION OR ARE WE STUCK IN 1958? Cover Image

ICA AND THE WRITING REQUIREMENT: FOLLOWING MODERN TRENDS TOWARDS LIBERALIZATION OR ARE WE STUCK IN 1958?
ICA AND THE WRITING REQUIREMENT: FOLLOWING MODERN TRENDS TOWARDS LIBERALIZATION OR ARE WE STUCK IN 1958?

Author(s): Jack Graves
Subject(s): History of Law, International Law
Published by: Правни факултет Универзитета у Београду
Keywords: International Commercial Arbitration; Writing requirement; Consent; Default; Separability; Enforcement;

Summary/Abstract: Article 7 of the Model Law was revised in 2006 to liberalize any requirements of form, consistent with modern commercial practices and modern legal trends reflected in national laws. To the extent adopted by national legislatures, either of the two available options under this revision will effectively eliminate any requirement of a “record of consent,” thus making arbitration agreements more easily enforceable in the adopting jurisdiction. However, any such revision of national laws on arbitration based on the revisions of Article 7 of the Model Law will not necessarily have any effect on enforcement of awards in other jurisdictions under the New York Convention of 1958. Thus, the revision of the Article 7 of the Model Law presents a very real possibility that an arbitral tribunal seated in a jurisdiction adopting these revisions may accept jurisdiction over a dispute and render an award that might not be enforceable in other jurisdictions because it fails to meet the requirements of Article II of the Convention.

  • Issue Year: 57/2009
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 36-44
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English