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Arbitration is

There are many ways to resolve civil disputes in our country, among which the faster and more effective way is arbitration. The parties can go to the arbitration committee to resolve the dispute through an arbitration agreement, and the provisions of the Arbitration Law apply. Therefore, the following will introduce to you the knowledge about what arbitration law belongs to and its related aspects, hoping to help everyone solve the corresponding problems. 1. What kind of law does the Arbitration Law belong to? The Arbitration Law belongs to the Civil and Commercial Procedure Law. It was formulated to ensure fair and timely arbitration of economic disputes and protect the legitimate rights and interests of the parties.

2. The scope of application of arbitration The scope of application of arbitration refers to which disputes can be resolved through arbitration and which disputes cannot be resolved by arbitration. This is what we usually call the "arbitrability of disputes." Article 2 of the "Arbitration Law" stipulates: "Contract disputes and other property rights disputes between citizens, legal persons and other organizations who are equal subjects may be arbitrated." Three principles are clarified here: First, the two parties to the dispute must be Civil subjects include domestic and foreign legal persons, natural persons and other legal organizations with independent subject qualifications; secondly, the disputed matters in arbitration should be matters that the parties have the right to dispose of; thirdly, the scope of arbitration must be contract disputes and other property rights disputes. Contract disputes are disputes arising from the conclusion or performance of various economic contracts between the two parties in economic activities, including various domestic economic contract disputes, intellectual property disputes, Real estate contract disputes, futures and securities trading disputes, insurance contract disputes, loan contract disputes, bill disputes, mortgage contract disputes, transportation contract disputes and maritime disputes, etc. It also includes foreign-related economic disputes involving Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan. As well as disputes involving international trade, international agency, international investment, international technical cooperation, etc. Other property rights disputes mainly refer to disputes caused by infringements, which are often seen in infringements in the fields of product quality liability and intellectual property rights. According to the provisions of the Arbitration Law, there are two types of disputes that cannot be arbitrated: (1) Marriage, adoption, guardianship, support, and inheritance disputes cannot be arbitrated. Although such disputes are civil disputes and involve property rights disputes to varying degrees, such disputes often involve identity relationships that the parties cannot freely dispose of. They require a court to make a judgment or a government agency to make a decision, and are not within the jurisdiction of arbitration institutions. (2) Administrative disputes cannot be arbitrated. Administrative disputes, also known as administrative disputes, refer to disputes arising from administrative management between state administrative agencies, or between state administrative agencies and enterprises, institutions, social groups and citizens. Foreign laws stipulate that such disputes should be resolved through administrative review or administrative litigation in accordance with the law. The Arbitration Law also stipulates that the arbitration of labor disputes and agricultural contract disputes within agricultural collective economic organizations shall be separately stipulated by the state, which means that the Arbitration Law shall not apply to the resolution of such disputes. This is because although labor disputes and agricultural contract disputes within agricultural collective economic organizations can be arbitrated, they are different from general civil economic disputes, so they can only be adjusted by separate provisions.

3. Legal Provisions on Arbitration "Arbitration Law" Article 1 This law is formulated to ensure fair and timely arbitration of economic disputes, protect the legitimate rights and interests of the parties, and ensure the healthy development of the socialist market economy. Article 2 Contract disputes and other property rights disputes between citizens, legal persons and other organizations who are equal subjects may be arbitrated. Article 3 The following disputes cannot be arbitrated: (1) Disputes over marriage, adoption, guardianship, support, and inheritance; (2) Administrative disputes that should be handled by administrative agencies in accordance with the law. According to legal provisions, it can be known that the arbitration law belongs to the civil and commercial procedure law. It was formulated to ensure fair and timely arbitration of economic disputes and protect the legitimate rights and interests of the parties. The above is to bring you relevant knowledge about what arbitration law belongs to. If you don’t understand anything or have other questions, you can consult a lawyer.