{"product_id":"china-and-international-commercial-dispute-resolution-9789004306721","title":"China and International Commercial Dispute Resolution","description":"\u003cb\u003eBook Synopsis\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eChina and International Commercial Dispute Resolution presents important contributions from eminent legal scholars from Europe, the United States, Australia, South America, and China in a variety of areas of international commercial law with relevance to China. The authors provide expert analyses from a number of perspectives – doctrinal, comparative, empirical, economic, and legal – on an array of issues, private and public, involved in or arising from international commercial dispute resolution in China.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTable of Contents\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eNotes on Contributors  1\tIntroduction Qiao Liu and Xiang Ren Part I General Issues in International Commercial Arbitration 2\tSpecific Performance in International Arbitration Ewan McKendrick and Iain Maxwell 2.1\tThe meaning of ‘specific performance’ 2.2\tCommon law and civil law 2.3\tSpecific performance in an arbitral context 2.4\tXiamen Xinjingdi Group Ltd v Eton Properties Ltd 3\tEU Law in Chinese International Commercial Arbitration Jürgen Basedow 3.1\tArbitration in the Law of the European Union 3.2\tArbitral Proceedings and State Courts in the European Union 3.3\tEU Law and the Merits of International Arbitration Proceedings 3.4\tArbitration Panels and the European Court of Justice 3.5\tConclusion 4\tUsing Soft Law in International Commercial Contract Arbitration Larry A. DiMatteo 4.1\tIntroduction 4.2\tSoft Law and International Commercial Arbitration 4.3\tNormative Power of Soft Law 4.4\tTypes of Soft Law 4.5\tInterpretive Methodologies\t 4.6\tSoft Law Trumps Hard Law: Private Customary International Law 4.7\tHard and Soft Law in International Commercial Disputes 4.8\tConclusion 5\tIndependence and Impartiality of Arbitrators: A Comparative Perspective Carlos Matheus López 5.1\tFactors in Selection of Arbitrators 5.2\tBackground 5.3\tIndependence and Impartiality 5.4\tDuty of Disclosure 5.5\tEfforts to Systematize and Limits 5.6\tPractical Analysis Factors 5.7\tMeans to Ensure Arbitrator Independence and Impartiality 5.8\tPractical Steps to Select a Party-nominated Arbitrator 5.9\tPre-appointment Interview 5.10\tSome Criteria to Challenge an Arbitrator Part II Specific Issues in International Commercial Arbitration 6\tChina and Foreign Direct Investment: Looking Ahead Leon Trakman 6.1\tIntroduction 6.2\tInvestment Claims and China 6.3\tISA Claims by Chinese Investors Abroad\t 6.4\tISA Claims Brought Against China 6.5\tChinese Arbitrators 6.6\tWithdrawing From ISA? 6.7\tA “China-made” Investment Jurisprudence? 6.8\tChina’s Distinctive History of “Liberalization”\t 6.9\tChina’s “Liberalization” of its BITs 6.10\tThe History of Chinese BITS 6.11\tModelling China’s Model BIT 6.12\t“Alternative” Dispute Resolution 6.13\tConclusion 7\tArbitrability of Company Law Disputes Andrew Johnston 7.1\tIntroduction 7.2\tArbitration under the statutory contract 7.3\tUnder shareholder agreements 7.4\tActions by the company against its directors 7.5\tDerivative action by minority shareholder against directors 7.6\tUnfair prejudice applications 7.7\tConclusion 8\tRules of Evidence in CIETAC International Arbitration Song Lu 8.1\tIntroduction 8.2\tGeneral Approaches towards Disclosure and Investigation of facts  8.3\tPRC Civil Procedure Law  8.4\tCurrent PRC Statute on Rules of Evidence in Arbitration 8.5\tRules of Evidence Agreed by the Parties 8.6\tRules of Evidence for China – CIETAC Evidence Guidelines 8.7\tConclusion Part III  Issues in International Commercial Law and Non-Arbitration Dispute Resolution 9\tA Critique of the European Contract Code ‘Project’ Roger Halson 9.1\tIntroduction 9.2\tThe General Background to Codification  9.3\tProcess and the creation of the CESL 9.4\tFurther outline of the CESL including available remedies 9.5\tKey Arguments for Reform 9.6\tFurther Critique 9.7\tConclusion 10\tCISG in Chinese Courts: The First Look Qiao Liu and Xiang Ren 10.1\tIntroduction 10.2\tApplicability of CISG in Chinese Courts 10.3\tThe Survey 10.4\tConclusion 11\tState-owned Enterprises in the WTO Law: An Analysis of United States–Definitive Anti-dumping and Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China Ming Du 11.1\tIntroduction  11.2\tState-owned Enterprises in the Law of World Trade Organization 11.3\tThe US- Antidumping and Countervailing Duties Case 11.4\tConclusion 12\tJudicial Mediation: A Behavioural Law and Economics Perspective Qi Zhou 12.1\tIntroduction 12.2\tMediation and Judicial Mediation 12.3\tJudicial Mediation As Solutions 12.4\tEvaluating the Role of Judicial Mediation 12.5\tEvaluating the Efficiency of Judicial Mediation 12.6\tConclusion  INDEX","brand":"Brill","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":53210678624599,"sku":"9789004306721","price":160.8,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"url":"https:\/\/bookcurl.com\/products\/china-and-international-commercial-dispute-resolution-9789004306721","provider":"Book Curl","version":"1.0","type":"link"}