- May 27, 2012
 
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Armanius said:Based on my professional experience, judges will send parties to arbitration when there is a clear agreement between the parties that their disputes will be adjudicated by an arbitrator as opposed to a court of law.
And the SCOTUS cases that give them GREAT leeway to force arbitration agreements are pretty clear that they want arbitration in any instance where it is minimally feasible. Look on the fine print of that plane ticket you just bought, and see what happens if you have a problem you want to pursue against the airline. The number of agreements that people sign up for that include arbitration agreements that specify the exact details of the process, and your inability to challenge them is shocking...and courts ROUTINELY uphold them...to a fault IMO, but them's is the facts on that. In fact, arbitration provisions in contracts can be upheld even where THERE ARE DISCRIMINATORY PROVISIONS IN THE REST OF THE CONTRACT, so long as the arbitration provision does not appear to have been written with such discrimination. Federal courts want to force arbitration whenever they can, and contrary to this Outside reporter, I don't see this as anything special having read many cases involving enforcement of arbitration provisions.
				
		
			
	