The Virtues of Episodic Justice - Chapter 40 - Reflections on International Arbitration
Originally from Reflections on International Arbitration - Essays in Honour of Professor George Bermann
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While the arbitration world has evolved over the last 15 years, it remains the case that dispositive motions in international arbitration (sometimes called motions for summary adjudications or early disposition) are rare, and more rarely successful. Intensely focused on achieving an efficient outcome, arbitral tribunals remain reluctant to slow things down or engage in a process that may not result in shortening the overall length of the proceeding. This focus on efficiency is entirely appropriate and contributes to the speedier results that arbitration attains as compared to its U.S. litigation cousin, where such motions are routinely attempted. But I would like to suggest that the focus on efficiency overlooks less quantifiable benefits of dispositive motion practice that may be said to degrade the quality of justice that arbitration delivers. I think there are three such benefits, which I will call (I) the shaping effect of motion practice, (II) the focus factor, and (III) the continuous feedback phenomenon. This essay argues that arbitral tribunals, and arbitral practice generally, should recognize these intangible virtues in deciding whether to permit or pursue such motions.
Since about 2006, when the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) revised its rules to provide for early dismissal of claims, the arbitration community has increasingly acknowledged that summary adjudication procedures have a place in international arbitration.