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This is the first book to focus on the legal question of the incorporation of arbitration clauses, even though this issue constitutes a common problem that arises frequently in practice. This book will be of interest to lawyers and professionals in arbitration, reinsurance, construction, and shipping, as well as to relevant academic courses.
List of contents
Table of Cases, Preface, Part I Muddying the Water: Incorporation of Arbitration Clauses in Shipping, Reinsurance, and Construction Chain Contracts, Chapter 1 The Foundations of Incorporation and Arbitration Clauses, Chapter 2 Incorporation of Charterparty Arbitration Clauses into Bills of Lading, Chapter 3 Incorporation of Arbitration Clauses into Reinsurance Contracts, Chapter 4 Construction Contracts and the Incorporation of Arbitration Clauses, Chapter 5 Singapore Law and Incorporation of Arbitration Clauses, PART II Not Incorporation – but a Close Analogy: Arbitration Clauses Binding Third Parties, Chapter 6 Arbitration Agreements and Third Parties, Index
About the author
Aslı Arda works as an Assistant Professor at the University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Law, Center for Private Governance (CEPRI). Her research fundamentally focuses on digitalization and decarbonization in shipping from a private law perspective. She formerly worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher at CEPRI from May 2020 and her project focused on the management and liability aspects of the commercial implementation of remotely-controlled and autonomous ships. Asli has an LLM in Maritime Law with distinction from the University of Exeter, UK, and she holds a PhD in Law from the same University, which she obtained in 2020. Aslı's primary fields of research are digitalization and decarbonization in shipping, contract law, shipping law (mainly dry shipping), autonomous and remotely controlled ships from a private law perspective, digitization and digitalization in law, commercial arbitration agreements, and insurance law.
Summary
This is the first book to focus on the legal question of the incorporation of arbitration clauses, even though this issue constitutes a common problem that arises frequently in practice. This book will be of interest to lawyers and professionals in arbitration, reinsurance, construction, and shipping, as well as to relevant academic courses.