Post by account_disabled on Mar 13, 2024 22:40:50 GMT -5
For Bernardo Cremades , the incorporation of Spanish as the official language of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (TAS) : “It is something we have been fighting for in recent years and that opens the door to Spanish referees.” Following his incorporation into the Committee of Experts on the Sports and Entertainment Industry created by the European Arbitration Association (AEA) and which brings together eighty professionals, Bernardo Cremades talks about the importance of the CAS decision for arbitration in Spanish . The positioning of arbitration in the sports and entertainment sector has become especially relevant for Spanish professionals who are dedicated or want to promote their careers in this discipline. Barely a month ago, the CAS announced its decision that Spanish be admitted as an official language. For Bernardo Cremades: “The CAS announcement has enormous importance for sports arbitration in our environment and will be an important catalyst.
It is something that we have been fighting for in recent years and that opens the door to Spanish referees.” The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) or Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) was created by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1984 to settle disputes during the Olympic Games. Currently, the CAS resolves legal conflicts related to all sports. Bernando Cremades Jr. has also joined this AEA Committee of Experts DM Databases on the Sports and Entertainment Industry.The second series of the biennial African Arbitration Survey “ The SOAS University of London Survey ” has been published to identify the main African arbitration centers and the main African seats, based on online responses from arbitration users in Africa, and of which nearly 90% recommend arbitration in African courts . The survey, conducted by Emilia Onyema *, identifies the largest and busiest arbitration centers in Africa through 350 responses from people in 34 countries across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, North America and Europe.
Of respondents have participated in arbitration in Africa from 2010 to 2019 as arbitrator, lawyer, court clerk, expert and litigants; 60% (210) have participated in institutional arbitration on the continent and 48% (168) have participated in ad hoc arbitration. The five main arbitration centers in Africa, according to the results, are: the Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa (AFSA); Cairo Regional Center for International Commercial Arbitration (CRCICA); Ouagadougou Arbitration and Mediation and Conciliation Center (OAMCC); OHADA Joint Center for Justice and Arbitration (CCJA); and the Kigali International Arbitration Center (KIAC). Those chosen as the Top 5 African arbitration centers by those surveyed are: AFSA, CRCICA, Kigali International Arbitration Center (KIAC), Lagos Court of Arbitration (LCA) and Nairobi Center for International Arbitration (NCIA) The arbitral institution with the most procedures in Africa is the International Center for Arbitration and Mediation of Abuja.