"A great judge once wrote that 'The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience'. Adjudicating Construction and Engineering Disputes brings together the vast experience of two of the UK's most prominent adjudicators. For the neophyte adjudicator as well as the old hand, there is a richness of practical wisdom in this book for decision makers to mine". - Julian Bailey, Partner, Jones Day and author of Construction Law (4th edition)
"This book will become the definitive guide for adjudicators not only in the UK but in all jurisdictions that adopt this method of dispute resolution. It is practical yet rigorous, concise yet comprehensive. The appendices are likely to be of great assistance. We are lucky that Jonathan Cope and Matthew Molloy have shared their extraordinary expertise and insightful advice with us". - Professor Renato Nazzini PhD FCIArb, director of the Centre of Construction Law and Dispute Resolution, King's College London
"This book is an invaluable guide to adjudication. Written from the adjudicator's perspective, in an accessible and fluent style, it is full of very useful and practical information gleaned from the authors' many years of experience.Everyone will learn from this book. I highly recommend it." - Victoria Russell LLB FCIArb FCIOB FFB, honorary president of the Adjudication Society
"Clear, practical, easy to follow and comprehensive, this start-to-finish guide to adjudication applies internationally. Matthew Molloy and Jonathan Cope have got the balance right, for practitioners and party representatives alike. They do not overwhelm with academic detail, but everything you need to know is there, clearly informed by the authors' decades of real-world experience." - Dr John Fletcher, Executive Director, Dispute Resolution Service, RICS
"Molloy and Cope's book provides a solid 'cradle to grave' practical guide to those who wish to practise or are already practising as adjudicators of construction and engineering disputes. The subject matter of the book, although primarily focused on adjudication practice in the UK, is also applicable internationally in jurisdictions where adjudication legislation has been enacted or where there are adjudication provisions within the contract. Molloy and Cope emphasise the common features of adjudication within each jurisdiction: for example, while the substantive laws do differ between jurisdictions, the common principles are that there must be a dispute, the adjudicator's Decision is temporarily binding, natural justice should be adhered to in relation to procedural fairness and the adjudicator having to act impartially and/or independent of the parties, and Decisions should be reached within a prescribed time limit. Molloy and Cope also broadly identify the differences between each jurisdiction. The book does a very good job of providing a practical guide to the practice of adjudication from the perspective of an adjudicator." - Robert Gemmell LLM FRICS FCIArb, Chartered Arbitrator