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
Arbitration in Thailand: PART 2 – enforcing contracts outside of Thai courts
Part 2 explains why arbitration is often a stronger alternative to Thai court litigation — from the legal requirements for a valid arbitration agreement, to choosing an institute like the ICC or TAI, to how awards become enforceable in over 140 countries under the New York Convention.
Arbitration in Thailand: PART 1 – introduction
Part 1 introduces arbitration in Thailand — why it offers a neutral, flexible, and internationally enforceable alternative to Thai court litigation, and the remaining gaps that still need to be addressed for Thailand to become a truly pro-arbitration jurisdiction.
Arbitration in ASEAN: Part Three — Why arbitration?
Part Three of our ASEAN arbitration series looks at why arbitration often beats going to court — specialist arbitrators, your choice of venue and language, and simpler cross-border service of process — plus what’s needed to actually put a valid arbitration agreement in place.
Arbitration in ASEAN: Part Two — How does arbitration work?
Part Two breaks down the legal framework behind arbitration in ASEAN — the New York Convention, national arbitration laws across Southeast Asia, and how the parties’ own agreement (not state law) is what actually empowers an arbitrator to decide a dispute.
Arbitration in ASEAN: Part One — What is arbitration?
Part One introduces arbitration as an alternative to slow, often unenforceable court proceedings in ASEAN — explaining why arbitration awards are hard to challenge and how the New York Convention makes them enforceable almost anywhere in the world.