Launched in 1985, Arbitration International provides quarterly coverage
for national and international developments in the world of arbitration. The
journal aims to maintain balance between academic debate and practical
contributions to the field, providing both topical material on current
developments and analytic scholarship of permanent interest. Arbitrators,
counsel, judges, scholars and government officials will find the journal
enhances their understanding of a broad range of topics in private dispute
resolution. Features include (i) articles covering all major arbitration rules
and national jurisdictions written by respected international practitioners
and scholars, (ii) cutting edge notes covering recent developments and ongoing
debates in the field and (iii) book reviews of the latest publications in the
world of arbitration.
Arbitration International meets the needs of lawyers and others engaged
in the development and application of international arbitration as a means of
international commercial dispute resolution. The journal contains over 100
pages of authoritative information per issue, maintaining an appropriate
balance between controversial subjects for debate and topics geared toward
practical use. It enables arbitrators and practitioners of other forms of
alternative dispute resolution, lawyers, academics, judges, corporate legal
advisors, and government officials to remain conversant in this cutting edge
arena and to access information of practical use in their fields.
Additional information:
Arbitration International seeks independent scholarship and cannot
accept material from authors with direct professional involvement in cases
forming the focus of an article. Editorial decisions are made based on full
articles or notes, rather than topic proposals, submitted by the authors
themselves.
Review Copies: All review copies of books should be sent to Thomas W.
Walsh, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, 125 Broad Street, New York, NY 10004-2498,
United States of America.
Correspondence: Please address all editorial correspondence (including
submission of articles) to Catherine Zara Raymond, Assistant to the Editorial
Board, Arbitration International, via e-mail to Catherine Zara Raymond at:
submissions@arbitrationinternational.info. Where e-mail cannot be used, please
address any correspondence to: Catherine Raymond, Assistant to the Editorial
Board, Arbitration International, c/o LCIA, 70 Fleet Street, London EC4Y 1EU,
United Kingdom.