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4 Romanian Constr. L. Rev. 5 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/rncnlwre4 and id is 1 raw text is: 






                RESOLVING CONSTRUCTION DISPUTES

                                  IN  THE COURTS:

   A  CONSIDERATION OF THE FUTURE OF CONSTRUCTION

      LAW IN THE AGE OF PRIVATE DISPUTE RESOLUTION



                                                                             Rami  Marginean
                                                                 Melbourne Law School, Australia

       Abstract
       The prevalence of disputes in construction projects has made dispute management and resolution a
major preoccupation of industry participants and their advisors. This preoccupation currently involves, in
addition to a focus on dispute avoidance processes, a reliance on arbitration as the principal dispenser of
justice. Arbitration provides construction disputants with important advantages that were previously
unavailable in the law courts: flexibility, finality, enforceability advantages and procedural advantages, to
name  but a few. However, two implications of the status quo give rise to concerns. First, there is the
consideration of the future of construction law in the age of private dispute resolution and the threat posed
to the rule of law by such processes. Secondly, when considering the costs of dispute resolution through
private processes, particularly arbitration, there appears to be noticeable and growing disenchantment with
the arbitration model. This paper argues that these implications highlight the need for an alternative to
arbitration in the resolution of international construction disputes. Over the last few decades, courts have
shown  a remarkable ability to innovate and respond to the needs of the dispute resolution community and
can provide this alternative.
       Keywords:   construction disputes, arbitration, private disputes resolution

       JEL  Codes: K12,  K15, K41,  K49



       1. Introduction

       The  paper is structured as follows:

    *   Section 2  identifies the status of construction law among   legal disciplines and  its

        contribution to the general law.

    *   Section 3 identifies the dispute resolution landscape. It shows the factors that have led to

        the proliferation of private dispute resolution processes and identifies a trend of increased

        reliance on arbitration in the resolution of construction disputes.

    *   Section 4  discusses the likely long-term  implications of this trend. Private dispute

        resolution mechanisms  pose  a challenge to the development  of construction law  as a

        discipline and the maintenance of the rule of law. Importantly, arbitration has failed to

        maintain the cost-efficiencies that made it an appealing dispute resolution method initially.


ROMANIAN CONSTRUCTION LAW REVIEW

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