This book fills the urgent need for a comprehensive understanding of the law, institutions, and processes shaping international economic dispute settlement within and beyond Africa.African economies are becoming increasingly central in global trade networks. Understanding the continent’s dispute resolution mechanisms is more crucial now than ever. The book systematically analyses the existing sub-regional courts and arbitral tribunals, as well as their roles. It achieves this by focusing on Africa's leading socio-legal actors involved in economic dispute settlement, including African States, transnational corporations, African international law scholars, international organisations, and African emerging transnational actors in arbitration. These 5 pillars create an ecology of socio-legal actors, interacting and intersecting to generate a complex social, political, historical, and legal variation matrix for understanding African international economic dispute settlement.The book covers the 2 main international economic dispute settlement divisions: international court litigation and international public and private arbitration. It also carefully analyses sub-regional international economic courts and international public and private arbitrations in Africa through a Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) lens and socio-legal actors methodology.International Economic Dispute Settlement in Africa provides invaluable insights for legal professionals, policymakers, researchers, and business leaders navigating the complexities of African dispute resolution.Winner of the 2024 SIEL–Hart Prize in International Economic Law.
Harrison Otieno Mbori is Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Luxembourg Centre for European Law, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg.
1. General Introduction2. Introduction to Courts, Arbitral Tribunals, and Other Dispute Settlement Mechanisms in Africa3. The Complexities of Africa’s Sub-Regional International Economic Courts and Tribunals4. The OHADA Common Court of Justice and Arbitration (OHADA CCJA): Innovation in the Shadow of Neo-Colonialism5. Benign and Radical Africanization of International Investment Dispute Settlement in Africa6. International and African Regional Arbitration Centers as Competing Nodes of Governance for Economic Disputes with African Sub-Regional Economic Courts and Tribunals7. Three Main Emerging Transnational Actors within the African International Arbitration Scene8. General Conclusion: New Frontiers and Failed Imaginations
Peter Muchlinski, Federico Ortino, Christoph Schreuer, Peter (Professor in International Commercial Law at the School of Oriental and African Studies) Muchlinski, Kings College London,) Ortino, Federico (Reader in International Economic Law, University of Vienna) Schreuer, Christoph (Professor in the Department for European, International, and Comparative Law
Lorand Bartels, Federico Ortino, University of Edinburgh) Bartels, Lorand (Lecturer in International Economic Law, Kings College London) Ortino, Federico (Reader in International Economic Law
Thomas Schultz, Federico Ortino, University of Geneva) Schultz, Thomas (Professor of Law, King's College London, Professor of International Arbitration, Professor of Law, King's College London, Professor of International Arbitration, King's College London) Ortino, Federico (Reader in International Economic Law, Reader in International Economic Law