ARBITRATION: THE BASICS - Journal of American Arbitration (JAA) - Vol. 5, No. 1
Originally from Journal of American Arbitration (JAA)
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I. INTRODUCTION
II. A HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF ARBITRATION
A. Historical Precedents and the Development of Modern Arbitration
B. Enactment of the Federal Arbitration Act
III. OBJECTIVES OF ARBITRATION
IV. HOW ARBITRATION BEGINS
A. The Agreement to Arbitrate
B. The Arbitration Clause
V. INITIATING THE ARBITRATION
A. Arbitration Agency or Ad Hoc Proceeding
B. Notifying the Arbitration Agency of Request for Arbitration
C. Choosing the Arbitrator
D. Notification Requirements
E. Scheduling
F. Arbitrator Disclosure Requirements
G. Tendency to Delay
H. Time Required
VI. PRE-ARBITRATION MATTERS
A. Discovery
B. Subpoena Power of Persons and Materials
C. Pre-Hearing Issues
VII. THE HEARING
A. The Place
B. Marking Exhibits and Other Preliminary Matters
C. The Evidence
D. Theory of the Case
E. Opening Statement
F. Burden of Proof
G. Swearing the Witnesses
H. Out of Sequence Witnesses
I. Direct Examination
J. Use of Visuals
K. Cross Examination
L. Redirect Examination
M. Re-Cross Examination
N. Hyper-Aggressive Advocates
O. Closing Arguments versus Post-Hearing Briefs
VIII. THE DECISION
A. Use of the Contract, the Law, and Public Policy
B. The Requirement of a Reasoned Decision
C. Procedural Requirements for a Decision
D. Sending the Decision to Reporting Bodies
E. Ability to Appeal an Arbitration Decision
IX. PROBLEMS WITH ARBITRATION
A. Adhesive Nature of the Contract
B. The Problem of Neutrality
C. Limited Discovery for Even Complex Cases
D. Process Too Complicated, Too Slow, Too Expensive
E. Non-Lawyer Oriented
F. Arbitrability of Statutory Rights
G. Lack of Transparency
H. Arbitrator’s Lack of Power and Control
I. Punitive Damages are Unusual Even when the Facts Warrant
J. No Better Result Than Litigation
K. No Review or Appeal
L. Is the Process of Arbitration to Achieve a Final Decision or to Seek Truth and Find Justice
X. CONCLUSION