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
- 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
- 53 Parallel Proceedings in International Commercial Arbitration
- 54 Res Judicata in International Arbitration
- 55 International Arbitration and Transparency
- 56 Contract and Treaty Interpretation in International Arbitration
- Part XII Areas of Concern
- Part XIII Arbitration and Related Fields
- Part XIV EU Law and Arbitration
55 - International Arbitration and Transparency
from Part XI - Legal Concepts
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
- 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
- 53 Parallel Proceedings in International Commercial Arbitration
- 54 Res Judicata in International Arbitration
- 55 International Arbitration and Transparency
- 56 Contract and Treaty Interpretation in International Arbitration
- Part XII Areas of Concern
- Part XIII Arbitration and Related Fields
- Part XIV EU Law and Arbitration
Summary
This entry examines whether the existing transparency gap between the investment treaty arbitration and international commercial arbitration regimes should be maintained, considering three factors: (i) the nature of the public interest, (ii) the role of confidentiality, and (iii) the role of party autonomy. The author concludes that the transparency gap should - as a general matter - be maintained. Although the public interest in particular international commercial arbitration cases can be significant - most notably in cases involving state entities or statutory claims - on a systemic level the public interest in internationalcommercial arbitration contrasts sharply with investment treaty arbitration, where cases consistently involve state entities and challenges to government measures. Equally important, two cornerstones of international commercial arbitration also support the existing transparency gap: (i) the availability of discreet and dispassionate dispute resolution, made possible by confidential proceedings, and (ii) the primacy of party autonomy. But with respect to the public availability of arbitral awards, the author concludes that the transparency gap should be narrowed significantly, given larger developments regarding international commercial dispute resolution and public access to decision-making.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023