Domain-Name Arbitration in the Arbitration-Law Context: Consent to, and Fairness in, the UDRP
Issue Date
2002Author
Ware, Stephen J.
Publisher
Lewis & Clark Law School
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Version
http://ssrn.com/abstract=992356
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In this Article, Professor Ware surveys many of the arbitration systems that have been attacked for lacking consent or fairness. The Article begins by introducing the domain-name arbitration system and summarizing the charges that it lacks consent or fairness. This Article asserts, however, that research reveals no sustained critique that domain-name arbitration lacks consent. The Article next provides what may be the first sustained analysis of consent issues in domain-name arbitration. Professor Ware concludes the article by placing domain-name arbitration in the context of arbitration generally, and, within that context, assesses the fairness of domain-name arbitration.
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Citation
Stephen J. Ware, Domain-Name Arbitration in the Arbitration-Law Context: Consent to, and Fairness in, the UDRP, 6 Journal of Small and Emerging Business Law 129-165 (2002).
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