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Journal Article

The Croatia v. Slovenia Arbitration: The Silver Lining

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Meshel,  Tamar
Department II, Max Planck Institute Luxembourg, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Meshel, T. (2017). The Croatia v. Slovenia Arbitration: The Silver Lining. The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals, 16(2), 288-306.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0001-5DC5-9
Abstract
Much controversy has surrounded the recent arbitration between Croatia and Slovenia. Nonetheless, the proceedings represent a welcome step in the right direction in terms of the perception and use of arbitration as a quasi-diplomatic interstate dispute resolution mechanism. Such an approach to arbitration is evident both in the parties’ arbitration agreement and in the arbitral tribunal’s final award in this case. The article first explains the proper use of interstate arbitration in its original form as a quasi-diplomatic process. This process produces a final and binding decision that respects international law yet does not necessarily rely solely on it. The article then examines how this original quasi-diplomatic nature of interstate arbitration is reflected in certain aspects of the Croatia v. Slovenia case.