Abstract

In contemporary times, the value of international commercial transactions in goods services has increased alongside globalisation and consequently translated on the flip side to increased prospects of commercial disputes. Although litigation through the court processes has hitherto been the default mechanism for the resolution of commercial disputes, it is manifestly clear that in the present era of globalisation and digital age, it is not always the most effective and efficient way of dealing with commercial disputes. In Africa, arbitration has gained traction and increasingly used to resolve international commercial disputes within and outside the continent. Regardless of its inherent strengths, international commercial arbitral awards are enforceable only through the domestic legal systems and to the extent that the arbitral awards are compatible with national laws and standards including public policy. In view of the foregoing, this work undertakes, from a comparative perspective, an in-depth analysis of the public policy exemption to the enforcement of arbitral awards in Nigeria. The significance of this research that concentrates on the public policy exception to the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in Nigeria, as against other aspects of international commercial arbitration, is because the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards are the most important and crucial part of the whole process of international commercial arbitration. It also intends to analyse public policy defence as articulated in several enforcement conventions and laws, particularly the New York Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Arbitral Award, the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration and the Nigerian Arbitration and Conciliation Act.

Highlights

  • In contemporary times, the value of international commercial transactions in goods services has increased alongside globalisation and translated on the flip side to increased prospects of commercial disputes

  • The significance of this research that concentrates on the public policy exception to the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in Nigeria, as against other aspects of international commercial arbitration, is because the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards are the most important and crucial part of the whole process of international commercial arbitration

  • The weaknesses in litigation as a means of resolving commercial disputes have given rise to alternative dispute resolution mechanisms such as arbitration which has been in ascendance as the global mechanism of choice for resolving commercial disputes over litigation mainly due to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which has greatly eased the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards

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Summary

Introduction

The value of international commercial transactions in goods services has increased alongside globalisation and translated on the flip side to increased prospects of commercial disputes. As a significantly more private, more consensual, and expedited alternative compared to standard court processes, arbitral agreements and awards are ostensibly easier to enforce In practice, this is not always the case because after succeeding in arbitrating a dispute, the enforcement of such arbitral awards at the national level are often fraught with challenges, including for reasons of public policy considerations raised by relevant states. Relying on the contemporary normative framework of commercial arbitration and the benefits of arbitral awards over litigation in globalized and interconnected economy, this work will examine through a comparative perspective the public policy defence applied in some jurisdictions, including Nigeria to refuse recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards. The restrictive and pro-enforcement definitions of public policy espoused by most countries, the United Kingdom and India is effectively undermining the potency of the public policy defence as a means of refusing enforcement of foreign arbitral awards

Normative Framework for Commercial Arbitration
Commercial Arbitration in Nigeria
Enforcement of Commercial Arbitral Awards
Arbitral Enforcement in Nigeria
Public Policy Exemption of Arbitral Awards
Comparative Perspective of Public Policy Exemption of Arbitral Awards
Conclusion and Recommendations
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