Publications
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As a part of our corporate social responsibility commitment DUENSING KIPPEN provides regular legal column contributions to numerous international, national and local hard and soft copy publications including: our regular legal column in The Phuket News newspaper, Mondaq, the Danish - Thai Trade News, Tropical Living magazine, Director magazine, Exotiq magazine, Samui - Phangan Real Estate magazine, The Pattaya Mail newspaper, Samui Express newspaper, Chiang Mai Mail newspaper and many others. We also make these publications available here below.
- Arbitration & ADR
- Dispute Resolution & Commercial Litigation
- Real Estate & Property
- Corporate & Commercial
- Tax
Commercial Contract Dispute Resolution in Thailand – THE THAI ARBITRATION INSTITUTE – Part 2: Costs, Fee & Who Pays
A breakdown of what a commercial contract dispute actually costs to arbitrate in Thailand — TAI’s official fee schedule, advance payment rules, and how the Arbitration Act allocates who ultimately bears the costs.
Commercial Contract Dispute Resolution in Thailand – THE THAI ARBITRATION INSTITUTE – Part 1: Procedure & Timing
A practical look at how commercial contract disputes move through TAI arbitration in Thailand — from filing a claim to the final award — plus realistic timelines and how enforcement works internationally under the New York Convention.
Arbitration in Thailand: PART 5 – the arbitrators
Part 5 looks at how arbitrators are selected and appointed in Thailand, the legal requirements for independence and impartiality under the Arbitration Act, and the process for challenging an arbitrator when conflicts of interest arise.
Arbitration in Thailand: PART 4 – the agreement to arbitrate
Part 4 explains what makes an Arbitration Agreement enforceable under Thai law — including model ICC and TAI clauses, key terms parties should negotiate upfront, and the limits on which disputes can actually be arbitrated.
Arbitration in Thailand: PART 3 – arbitration offers serval advantages to litigation in Thai courts
Part 3 outlines why arbitration often beats litigating in Thai courts — faster, harder-to-appeal awards, easier enforcement abroad under the New York Convention, specialist arbitrators, and simpler service of process for foreign parties.