Book contents
- Arbitration in the Digital Age
- Arbitration in the Digital Age
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Survey on the Present Use of ICT in International Arbitration
- Part I The Use of Technology in International Arbitration
- 2 Revolutionizing Technologies and the Use of Technology in International Arbitration
- 3 The Security and Reliability of Electronic Communication
- Your Associates, Staff and Partners: Friends or Foes?
- 4 Case Study
- 5 Case Study
- 6 Case Study
- Part II Arbitration, Arbitrators, Counsel and the Internet
- Index
4 - Case Study
The Institutional Perspective
from Part I - The Use of Technology in International Arbitration
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2018
- Arbitration in the Digital Age
- Arbitration in the Digital Age
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Survey on the Present Use of ICT in International Arbitration
- Part I The Use of Technology in International Arbitration
- 2 Revolutionizing Technologies and the Use of Technology in International Arbitration
- 3 The Security and Reliability of Electronic Communication
- Your Associates, Staff and Partners: Friends or Foes?
- 4 Case Study
- 5 Case Study
- 6 Case Study
- Part II Arbitration, Arbitrators, Counsel and the Internet
- Index
Summary
Arbitration institutions focus on arbitration practice, especially their arbitration rules and the proceedings as such. ICT is only relevant for them insofar as legal procedural aspects are concerned. The actual use of ICT or ICT services are at most an added value to their core services. By doing so, arbitration institutions respond to the demand of their members and users. Notwithstanding, arbitration institutions have a position in the market and the know-how that would place them in a good position to advance standardization of ICT use in arbitration proceedings with the perspective of making 100 percent digital proceedings technically - and legally - fully viable around the globe.
‘Того, кто опоздает, накажет жизнь’ (‘He who comes too late is punished by life’ – Michail Gorbatschow on 10 June 1989)- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Arbitration in the Digital AgeThe Brave New World of Arbitration, pp. 86 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2018