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.... The Concepcion's contract with AT&T provided for mandatory arbitration of al... because AT&T had not demonstrated that bilateral arbitration adequately substituted for the deterre... AT&T was consumer friendly, noting, for example, that the informal dispute resolution process was ...
... or in equityfxx the revocation of any contract." 9 U. S. C. §2. Weconsider whether the FAA pro... agreemenx favorably, noting, for example, xxxx the informal dispute-resolution process was ... AT&T had not shown that bilateral arbitrationadequatxxx substituted for the deterren...
... also those from other jurisdictions ("contracting states") with similar concepts in their double-tax...Consider for example an unregistered office in China from which a forei... only a unilateral interpretation of a bilateral treaty, the Singaporean government has not respond...
... Bilateral and Unilateral Contracts The exchange of mutual, ...An offer of a prize in a contest, for example, becomes a binding contract when a contestant succ...
... as an employee of a Government-owned, contractor-operated entity pursuant to a waiver. See ? 2641.3...Example 1 to paragraph (d):. A former employee of the Fede...This bilateral treaty is a particular matter involving specific p...
This essay provides an elementary, unified introduction to the models of market institutions that go beyond the competitive model of pricetaking behavior on both sides of the market. Several models of market institutions that govern price determination are explored and compared, including contracting, posted prices, bilateral bargaining, middlemen, and auctions. While equilibrium models still do not capture the full possibilities for market behavior, modeling specific market institutions reduces the level of abstraction inherent in the standard competitive model.
...Examples of market institutions include posted prices (pric...
...For example, an important norm of the regulatory system is tha... the contract model views as private and bilateral rather than public and multiparty in nature. . The...
...] to Azerbaijan and Myanmar." (2) For example, a United Nations Panel regarding the ongoing DRC ... on a BIT, but rather based on the contractual relationship between the Host-State and the invest...
... this section if the claim arises under a contract that:. (i) Is a reverse repurchase/repurchase agre...For example, a claim is exempt from the automatic stay in bank... that is not subject to a qualifying bilateral netting contract in accordance with paragraph (a)(...
In recent years foreign direct investment in developing nations has come under threat by government policies seeking to expropriate or nationalize the assets of foreign corporations. A variety of political and economic motivations have given rise to expropriation activities. This paper examines both the political, economic and legal basis underpinning these expropriation activities and outlines a corporate risk management strategy designed to confront these emerging political/economic threats.
... companies renegotiate their operating contracts and surrender control of their production faciliti... derives from selective application of bilateral investment treaties, regulatory expropriation or t...A number of contemporary and classic examples of asset nationalization serve to illustrate the v...
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