The assessment of international commercial arbitration on the basis of the various practitioners’ communities is a fascinating exercise. What is studied in universities is soon revealed to be a rather peculiar version of international commercial arbitration – one that, for the most part, only exists in textbooks, and involves a relatively small circle of practitioners and a few high-profile cases. International commercial arbitration, however, is a large and lively universe, the diversity of which raises the question on whether there is such thing as “international” commercial arbitration, or whether there are some common principles informing what is in fact a commercial dispute settlement mechanism declined differently in the various countries that offer it in some form. “International commercial arbitration” is a term that technically defines an arbitral dispute between parties of different nationalities based on a contract with a transnational element. Such transnationality is a fer...