Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2016
Publication Citation
2016 Journal of Dispute Resolution 387
Abstract
This study examines a legal experiment that occurred during the height of the global financial crisis. As markets from the United States to Europe to the Global South shook, one country – the United Arab Emirates – found itself on the brink of economic collapse. In particular, in 2009 the U.A.E’s Emirate of Dubai was contemplating defaulting on $60 billion of debt it had amassed. Recognizing that such a default would have cataclysmic reverberations across the globe, Dubai’s governmental leaders turned to a small group of foreign lawyers, judges, accountants, and business consultants for assistance. Working in a coordinated fashion, these external and internal actors soon imported into the Emirate a new regime of insolvency laws – and even an Anglo-American insolvency court – to help resolve Dubai’s financial troubles. Drawing upon elite theory scholarship, as well as on primary and secondary sources of data, this study argues that traditional ways of analyzing foreign influences on a domestic landscape need to be refined and further nuanced so as to take into account such important comparative cases as Dubai.
Recommended Citation
Jayanth K. Krishnan & Harold Koster,
An Innovative Matrix for Dispute Resolution: The Dubai World Tribunal and the Global Insolvency Crisis,
2016 Journal of Dispute Resolution 387
(2016).
Available at:
https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub/2552
Included in
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration Commons, International Economics Commons, International Law Commons