Abstract

The article examines the problematic issues of the grounds for litigation in international commercial arbitration. The urgency of this topic is due to the need for a lack of clear definition of the prerequisites for resolving disputes, as well as the procedure for their use in the practice of international commercial arbitration. In addition, the problematic aspects of dispute resolution in international commercial arbitration are analyzed and procedural measures for their resolution are identified.
 To achieve this goal, the material preconditions for dispute resolution in the ICA were studied and the procedure for resolving disputes was determined. The preconditions for transferring a dispute to international commercial arbitration, which are the advantages of arbitration compared to state courts, are, first of all, that it provides a more acceptable, accessible and simpler procedure for resolving disputes compared to state courts. In other words, it is a procedure established by the parties to the dispute, which in general can be adequate and adapted to make agreed decisions. Even when the parties turn to a permanent commercial arbitration, which has its own rules of procedure, they can provide for arbitration. The UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules of 2010 stipulate that when the parties decide to submit disputes to arbitration in accordance with these Rules, they shall be considered in accordance with these Rules.
 The study identified a number of major risks and difficulties faced by the party in applying to a state court: ignorance of the procedure required for a foreign state court; the obligation to conduct the proceedings in the language of the court’s location; the existence of several instances and the procedural formalism that occurs when applying to the general courts; judges do not always have the appropriate competence to deal with disputes arising from foreign trade; gathering evidence and evaluating it on the basis of the national legal system.
 The study concluded that the benefits of international commercial arbitration, in the presence of prerequisites for litigation, give much better benefits for litigation, which forms its authority among the relevant categories of legal entities and individual entrepreneurs.

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