Swiss Chambers’ Court of Arbitration and Mediation (Swiss Chambers)
Swiss Chambers was founded in Basel 2004 by the Chambers of Commerce of Basel, Berne, Geneva, Lausanne, Lugano, Neuchâtel and Zurich. Swiss Chambers offer arbitration in accordance with the Swiss Rules of International Arbitration. Initially limited to arbitrations with their seat in Switzerland, since August 2004, arbitrations under the Swiss Rules can be seated anywhere in the world. Since 2007, the Swiss Chambers also offers services in Commercial Mediation applying the Swiss Rules of Commercial Mediation.
Glossary
- UNCITRAL
- Terms of Reference
- Supporting judge
- Substantive law
- Sole arbitrator
- Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC)
- Seat of arbitration
- Request for arbitration
- Provisional and conservatory measures
- Procedural law
- “Pathological clause”
- New York Convention
- Multiparty Arbitration
- London Court of International Arbitration – LCIA
- Lex Mercatoria
- Language of the arbitration
- Investment Arbitration or Investment Treaty Arbitration
- International public policy
- International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) International Court of Arbitration
- International Chamber of Commerce – ICC
- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID)
- International Arbitration
- Institutional Arbitration
- Independence and impartiality
- IBA Rules on the Taking of Evidence in International Arbitration
- Honk Kong International Arbitration Centre – HKIAC
- Exequatur
- Enforcement
- Competence – competence
- China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission – CIETAC
- Award by consent
- Award
- Arbitrator
- Arbitration rules
- Arbitration law
- Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce (SCC)
- Arbitration agreement
- Arbitration
- Arbitral tribunal
- Arbitral institution
- Arbitral case law or Arbitral precedent
- Appointing authority
- Amiable composition
- American Arbitration Association - AAA
- Ad hoc arbitration
- Action to set aside