Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions

When  aprivate party enter into arbitration with a State Owned Enterprise (S.O.E.), there always a concern as to how the arbitral award might be enforced. It becomes even more worry some if the assets of the S.O.E. are mainly located in its own country or in a country, which practices absolute immun...

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Main Author: Rajesh Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2018-02-01
Series:University of Bologna Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/7666
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spelling doaj-e4476ded248b4b4cbc6cf34346ecf0e42020-11-25T02:49:56ZengUniversity of BolognaUniversity of Bologna Law Review2531-61332018-02-012234636610.6092/issn.2531-6133/76666988Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two JurisdictionsRajesh Sharma0RMIT UniversityWhen  aprivate party enter into arbitration with a State Owned Enterprise (S.O.E.), there always a concern as to how the arbitral award might be enforced. It becomes even more worry some if the assets of the S.O.E. are mainly located in its own country or in a country, which practices absolute immunity principle and treats S.O.Es as part of a State. Such practice creates an uncertainty for the private parties who are doing businesses with S.O.Es. On a practical side it is also well known that S.O.Es are big market player as buyer or seller and therefore they cannot be ignored at least in commercial sense. This paper analyses the two distinctive approaches adopted by courts in the U.K. and in Hong Kong on a similar set of facts in which the same group of S.O.Es were involved. As both Hong Kong and the U.K. are part of the same common law tradition, this paper also attempts to highlight that courts are now ready to see S.O.Es as a pure commercial entity rather that as an instrumentalities of a State so far as enforcement of arbitral awards are concerned.https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/7666Enforcement of AwardsSovereign Immunity and Enforcement of AwardsEffect of Absolute and Restrictive Sovereign Immunity on of AwardsEnforcement Against SOEsTreatment of State Assests and SOEs Assets for Enforcement of Awards
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajesh Sharma
spellingShingle Rajesh Sharma
Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
University of Bologna Law Review
Enforcement of Awards
Sovereign Immunity and Enforcement of Awards
Effect of Absolute and Restrictive Sovereign Immunity on of Awards
Enforcement Against SOEs
Treatment of State Assests and SOEs Assets for Enforcement of Awards
author_facet Rajesh Sharma
author_sort Rajesh Sharma
title Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
title_short Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
title_full Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
title_fullStr Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
title_full_unstemmed Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Against a State-Owned Entity: A Tale, Two Jurisdictions
title_sort enforcement of arbitral awards against a state-owned entity: a tale, two jurisdictions
publisher University of Bologna
series University of Bologna Law Review
issn 2531-6133
publishDate 2018-02-01
description When  aprivate party enter into arbitration with a State Owned Enterprise (S.O.E.), there always a concern as to how the arbitral award might be enforced. It becomes even more worry some if the assets of the S.O.E. are mainly located in its own country or in a country, which practices absolute immunity principle and treats S.O.Es as part of a State. Such practice creates an uncertainty for the private parties who are doing businesses with S.O.Es. On a practical side it is also well known that S.O.Es are big market player as buyer or seller and therefore they cannot be ignored at least in commercial sense. This paper analyses the two distinctive approaches adopted by courts in the U.K. and in Hong Kong on a similar set of facts in which the same group of S.O.Es were involved. As both Hong Kong and the U.K. are part of the same common law tradition, this paper also attempts to highlight that courts are now ready to see S.O.Es as a pure commercial entity rather that as an instrumentalities of a State so far as enforcement of arbitral awards are concerned.
topic Enforcement of Awards
Sovereign Immunity and Enforcement of Awards
Effect of Absolute and Restrictive Sovereign Immunity on of Awards
Enforcement Against SOEs
Treatment of State Assests and SOEs Assets for Enforcement of Awards
url https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/7666
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