908 resultados para Law of Arbitration: article 32
Resumo:
O presente trabalho tem como objetivo o estudo sobre o cabimento da ação anulatória - prevista no artigo 32 da Lei de Arbitragem - contra uma sentença arbitral doméstica que tenha violado a ordem pública. A relevância do tema encontra-se no fato de que o legislador, ao elencar as hipóteses pelas quais poderá ser declarada a invalidade de uma decisão arbitral, excluiu, propositalmente, a violação à ordem pública como uma delas. O Poder Judiciário ainda não teve a oportunidade de analisar o assunto. A preocupação, quando elaborada a Lei de Arbitragem em 1996, era a de que, caso o artigo 32 previsse expressamente a violação à ordem pública, todos os procedimentos arbitrais desembocariam no Judiciário, tendo em vista a indeterminação do conceito. Somava-se a isso o elevado preconceito que o instituto sofria no Brasil, além de seu pouco uso. O debate ganha ainda maior proporção quando se analisa as causas pelas quais o Poder Judiciário poderá negar homologação a uma sentença arbitral estrangeira. Quis o legislador, e o fez de modo expresso, que a violação à ordem pública fosse causa de negativa de homologação, mas nada disse com relação às sentenças domésticas. Analisarei, neste trabalho, todos os avanços pelos quais a arbitragem passou no Brasil, tudo para concluir, na primeira parte do trabalho, que a preocupação do legislador não mais subsiste. Além disso, analisarei os posicionamentos existentes na doutrina nacional para responder a principal pergunta desse trabalho: É possível ajuizar uma ação anulatória contra uma sentença arbitral doméstica que tenha violado a ordem pública, mesmo sem que o artigo 32 da Lei de Arbitragem a preveja, expressamente, como uma das causas de anulabilidade? Finalmente, no último capítulo do trabalho, exporei o meu entendimento sobre o assunto, no sentido de ser possível o ajuizamento de ação anulatória com base na combinação dos artigos 32, IV, com o artigo 2º, § 1º, ambos da Lei de Arbitragem.
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2013 marks 10 years since the Sexual Offences Act 2003 was passed. That Act made significant changes to the law of rape which appear now to have made very little difference to reporting, prosecution or conviction rates. This article argues that the Act has failed against its own measures because it remains enmeshed within a conceptual framework of sexual indifference in which woman continues to be constructed as man’s (defective) other. This construction both constricts the frame in which women’s sexuality can be thought and distorts the harm of rape for women. It also continues woman’s historic alienation from her own nature and denies her entitlement to a becoming in line with her own sexuate identity. Using Luce Irigaray’s critical and constructive frameworks, the article seeks to imagine how law might ‘cognize’ sexual difference and thus take the preliminary steps to a juridical environment in which women can more adequately understand and articulate the harm of rape.
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The third law of thermodynamics is formulated precisely: all points of the state space of zero temperature I""(0) are physically adiabatically inaccessible from the state space of a simple system. In addition to implying the unattainability of absolute zero in finite time (or ""by a finite number of operations""), it admits as corollary, under a continuity assumption, that all points of I""(0) are adiabatically equivalent. We argue that the third law is universally valid for all macroscopic systems which obey the laws of quantum mechanics and/or quantum field theory. We also briefly discuss why a precise formulation of the third law for black holes remains an open problem.
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The accretion of a phantom fluid with non-zero chemical potential by black holes is discussed with basis on the generalized second law of thermodynamics. For phantom fluids with positive temperature and negative chemical potential we demonstrate that the accretion process is possible, and that the condition guaranteeing the positiveness of the phantom fluid entropy coincides with the one required by the generalized second law. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Cet article sera publié dans Ghent Encyclopedia of Law and Economics, Gerrit De Geest (General Editor), 2nd edition, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2010.
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This review essay engages with Sandesh Sivakumaran’s book The Law of Non-International Armed Conflict, exploring its significance both in international humanitarian law and international law more generally.
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This work provides several policy proposals capable to strengthen the private enforcement of EU competition law in arbitration. It focuses on the procedural law aspects that are permeated by legal uncertainty and that have not yet fallen under the scrutiny of the law and economics debate. The policy proposals described herein are based on the functional approach to law and economics and aim to promote a more qualified decision making process by: adjudicators, private parties and lawmakers. The resulting framework of procedural rules would be a cost-effective policy tool that could sustain the European Commission’s effort to guarantee a workable level of competition in the EU internal market. This project aims to answer the following broad research question: which procedural rules can improve the efficiency of antitrust arbitration by decreasing litigation costs for private parties on the one hand, and by increasing private parties’ compliance with competition law on the other hand?Throughout this research project, such broad question has been developed into research sub-questions revolving around several key legal issues. The chosen sub-research questions result from a vacuum in the European enforcement system that leaves several key legal issues in antitrust arbitration unresolved. The legal framework proposed in this research project could prevent such a blurry scenario from impairing the EU private enforcement of competition law in arbitration. Therefore, our attention was triggered by those legal issues whose proposed solutions lead to relevant uncertainties and that are most suitable for a law and economics analysis.
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Main report -- Appendix A. Literature survey -- Appendix B. Hydraulic research -- Appendix C. Geotechnical research -- Appendix D. Ohio River demonstration projects -- Appendix F. Missouri River demonstration projects (2 v.) -- Appendix F. Yazoo River Basin demonstration projects -- Appendix G. Demonstration projects on other streams, nationwide (2 v.) -- Appendix H. Evaluation of existing projects (2 v.).