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Article
America and Other National Variations on the Theme of International Commercial Arbitration
Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law
  • Thomas E. Carbonneau, Penn State Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1988
Abstract

Despite attempts at harmonization through treaty relations and State participation in multilateral organizations, the international arena is a composite of unsettled and unsettling structures. The volatility of global politics and discordant national perceptions of legitimate lawful conduct constitute a precarious, usually unsuitable, basis for an international rule of law. Domestic concepts of legality rarely serve as adequate instruments for molding the character of international relations. The irreducible principle of national sovereignty makes the world community resistant to the adoption of universal juridical standards and consecrates the fragmentation of national self-interest as the ultimate source of legality among nation-states. This article assesses the exemplary dispute resolution value and law-making capability of the international commercial arbitration process.

Citation Information
Thomas E. Carbonneau. "America and Other National Variations on the Theme of International Commercial Arbitration" Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law Vol. 18 (1988) p. 143
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas-carbonneau/7/