Book contents
- Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration
- Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Public Law Questions Relating to Arbitration
- Part III Stakeholders in Arbitration
- Part IV Applicable Law
- Part V Jurisdiction of the Arbitrator
- 23 The Arbitration Agreement: Legal Nature, the Contractual and the Jurisdictional Aspect
- 24 The Various Forms of ‘Consent’ in International Arbitration
- 25 Protecting and Challenging the Arbitrator’s Jurisdiction
- 26 The Competence-Competence Principle’s Positive Effect
- 27 The Competence-Competence Principle’s Negative Effect
- 28 The ‘Separability’ of the Agreement to Arbitrate
- 29 Admissibility versus Jurisdiction
- 30 Settlement Efforts and Contract Adaptation by Arbitral Tribunals
- Part VI The Arbitral Tribunal
- Part VII Procedural Questions in Arbitration
- Part VIII Role of State Courts in Arbitration
- Part IX Awards
- Part X Post-Award Issues
- Part XI Legal Concepts
- Part XII Areas of Concern
- Part XIII Arbitration and Related Fields
- Part XIV EU Law and Arbitration
27 - The Competence-Competence Principle’s Negative Effect
from Part V - Jurisdiction of the Arbitrator
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2023
- Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration
- Cambridge Compendium of International Commercial and Investment Arbitration
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Public Law Questions Relating to Arbitration
- Part III Stakeholders in Arbitration
- Part IV Applicable Law
- Part V Jurisdiction of the Arbitrator
- 23 The Arbitration Agreement: Legal Nature, the Contractual and the Jurisdictional Aspect
- 24 The Various Forms of ‘Consent’ in International Arbitration
- 25 Protecting and Challenging the Arbitrator’s Jurisdiction
- 26 The Competence-Competence Principle’s Positive Effect
- 27 The Competence-Competence Principle’s Negative Effect
- 28 The ‘Separability’ of the Agreement to Arbitrate
- 29 Admissibility versus Jurisdiction
- 30 Settlement Efforts and Contract Adaptation by Arbitral Tribunals
- Part VI The Arbitral Tribunal
- Part VII Procedural Questions in Arbitration
- Part VIII Role of State Courts in Arbitration
- Part IX Awards
- Part X Post-Award Issues
- Part XI Legal Concepts
- Part XII Areas of Concern
- Part XIII Arbitration and Related Fields
- Part XIV EU Law and Arbitration
Summary
The negative effect doctrine discussed in this chapter deals with when, if ever, a state court will stay proceedings before it and refer disputants to the arbitrators for them to decide, in the first instance, whether an arbitration agreement between the parties (i) exists, (ii) is valid, and (iii) has a scope that covers the dispute in question. An affirmative answer on each of these points would mean that the dispute’s merits must be decided in arbitration. Thus, the negative effect issue concerns whether a decision on these three jurisdiction sub-issues should be decided with finality by the court itself at the outset, or, in the first instance, by the arbitrators themselves, with possible court review on jurisdiction delayed until later.The chapter discusses the dramatically different approaches to the negative effect issue followed in several leading arbitral jurisdictions: France, Germany, the U.S., Switzerland, the U.K., and Canada (Quebec).It also discusses the underlying policy issues at stake in the different national approaches to the doctrine.In conclusion the chapter offer’s the author’s view of a preferred approach to the negative effect issue.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023