Following the first volume of the Czech (& Central European) Yearbook of Arbitration (CYArb), the second volume of CYArb thematically concurs that the points of friction between arbitration, as an alternative dispute resolution mechanism are the freedom parties have in setting up the methods and mechanisms for the dispute settlement, and the state organized court proceedings with its obligatory jurisdiction and strict rules. The state organized court proceedings guarantee the firm borders and equality of means regarding the protection of the fundamental rights of the parties during the proceedings. The primary focus of CYArb is the issue of autonomy throughout the arbitration process. The principle of autonomy represents the backbone of arbitration as the ADR mechanism. It provides to the parties the necessary freedom to stipulate the adequate method for the solution of the dispute. On the other hand, the autonomous approach of the parties creates an informal relationship among the subjects involved in dispute resolution. The informality provides room for the autonomy of the arbitrators or that of the arbitral tribunal, be it in ad hoc or institutional proceedings on how to advance the dispute. The CYArb project aims to highlight the (potential) pitfalls of each of the categories of the autonomous parties present during the various types of arbitral proceedings in order to analyze the role of autonomy as a leading principle in the ADR mechanisms in its mutual interaction. The topic therefore provides a wide spectrum of interesting issues to be addressed from the practice and academic points of view, particularly with regard to the comparison of the specific national and international approaches of the permanent arbitral courts. The project concept and editors are drawn from Czech Yearbook of International Law – CYIL. The ideological similarity between CYIL and CYArb is primarily reflected in its concept. The third volume of CYIL is in preparation and will be published by JURIS. The CYArb annual volume will be published exclusively in English with abstracts of the articles provided in Czech/Slovak, French, German, Polish, Russian and Spanish. The website dedicated to the project, www.czechyearbook.org is operational in a total of 16 languages. A vital part of the project is the cooperation with leading figures and institutes in the field. In the Czech Republic, endeavor has the cooperation of the particular departments of the following institutions: – University of West Bohemia in Pilsen, Faculty of Law, Department of International Law & Department of Constitutional Law – Masaryk University in Brno, Faculty of Law, Department of International and European Law – VŠB – TU Ostrava, Faculty of Economics, Department of Law – Institute of State and Law, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic In the Slovak Republic: – Pavol Jozef Šafárik University in Košice, Faculty of Law, Department of Commercial Law Non-academic institutions participating in the CYArb Project: – International Arbitral Centre of the Austrian Federal Economic Chamber, Vienna. – Court of International Commercial Arbitration attached to the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Romania, Bucharest. – Arbitration Court attached to the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Budapest – Arbitration Court attached to the Economic Chamberof the Czech Republic and Agricultural Chamber of the Czech Republic, Prague – Arbitration Court attached to the Czech-Moravian Commodity Exchange Kladno (Czech Republic) – ICC National Committee Czech Republic – The Court of Arbitration at the Polish Chamber of Commerce in Warsaw
The topic for the inaugural edition of the Czech (& Central European) Yearbook of Arbitration (CYArb) is a highly interdisciplinary investigation into the relationship between human rights and arbitration.
Warsaw [POL] 31 January 2012 Conference held by the Arbitration Court at the Polish Chamber of Commerce on “FIDIC Contracts.” Warsaw [POL] 8 February ... Lucien W. Valloni (Advising and Representing Clients in Sports Law Disputes), dr.
The above-described restrictions only apply with respect to public policy in terms of EU law, but not in terms of ... of public policy as compared to that of public policy (ordre public) as understood in terms of international law.
In the Czech Republic, lex arbitri is not part of civil procedural law. The rules of arbitration are contained in a separate law (i.e. the Arbitration Act), which provides a comprehensive legal framework for this type of proceedings.
Derived from the renowned multi-volume International Encyclopaedia of Laws, this book provides ready access to the law applied to cases involving cross border issues in the Czech Republic.
applicable law and the agreement on dispute resolution may also be entered into anytime after the conclusion of the arbitration ... COMPARISON WITH THE LAW OF THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC (SLOVARBACT): Part One Fundamental Provisions Section 1 .
[The Development ofthe Provisions on the Public Procurements in the Czech Republic (pursuant to EU/EC Law)]. No. 1, pp. 36-56. ... Zdeněk Kučera, Mezinárodníprávo soukromé [Private International Law], Brno: Doplněk /Aleš Čeněk ...
It also includes the annual report of the Commission, meeting records, General Assembly resolutions and Sixth Committee reports related to UNCITRAL’s work, and a bibliography of recent scholarly writings examining the legal texts prepared ...
... European Parliament and of the Council on Consumer Rights, COM(2008)614 final' in Jud, B. and Wendehorst, C. (eds.), Neuordnung des Verbraucherprivatrechts in Europa (Vienna: Manz, 2009), pp. 189–96 Jud, B. and Wendehorst, C. (eds.) ...
(Private) International Law, European Private International Law and Legal Relations in Foreign Trade Relations, Including International Arbitration and Other Private Law Areas with Transnational Dimensions [CZE] – [CZECH REPUBLIC] ...