TY - BOOK AU - Schinazi,Mikael TI - Three ages of international commercial arbitration T2 - Cambridge studies in international and comparative law SN - 9781108799775 U1 - 341.522 PY - 2022/// CY - New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - International commercial arbitration KW - Arbitration and award KW - LAW / International N2 - "There is no one way of writing the modern history of international commercial arbitration, but rather a "radical pluralism" of historical methods and approaches, several of which will be used in this book. Schematically, one could focus on the history of events, the history of concepts, or the history of individual people (there are indeed many well-known, as well as less known but no less fascinating, figures in the modern history of international arbitration). When it comes to concepts, one could trace the history of the notion of lex mercatoria or that of the arbitral legal order, for example. With regard to events, one could explore narrow timescales, focusing, for example, on a few key events and explaining how they led to the present state of international commercial arbitration. This approach - which some might call histoire événementielle or event-based history, with its "brief, rapid, nervous fluctuations" - views history as closely tied to specific events. Applied to the study of international arbitration, it would focus on a few relevatory moments that led to the current state of affairs. For example, the genesis of the New York Convention was a seminal moment and turning point in the modern history of international commercial arbitration. Participants from a wide range of national, cultural, and legal backgrounds gave detailed thought to the role that individual states should play in the modern international arbitration compact. This event had broader implications for the modern history of international commercial arbitration"-- ER -