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How the 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law and Taiwan's Early‑2026 Litigation Changes Affect Cross‑border Commercial Disputes, Practical Guidance for Taiwanese Businesses

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: May 12, 2026

Cross-border commercial disputes Taiwan businesses face are being reshaped by two concurrent forces: the implementation of the 2026 Mainland (PRC) Arbitration Law, which overhauls court supervision, interim relief, and enforcement mechanisms across the strait, and a series of early‑2026 Taiwan developments, including the Constitutional Court’s landmark March 27, 2026 decision and revised Fair Trade Commission (FTC) enforcement rules, that alter the procedural landscape for commercial dispute resolution in Taiwan. Together, these changes demand that general counsel, in‑house teams, and commercial managers reassess forum selection, enforcement planning, and contract drafting for every significant Taiwan–PRC commercial relationship. This guide delivers the practical playbook: a step‑by‑step enforcement checklist, a forum‑selection decision framework, sample contract clauses, and immediate actions Taiwanese businesses should take now.

TL;DR, Three Immediate Actions for Decision‑Makers

  • Preserve evidence and assets now. If a cross‑border dispute is imminent, apply for provisional attachment or evidence preservation in a Taiwan court before formal proceedings begin, Taiwan’s interim‑measures framework provides powerful tools that operate independently of the chosen forum.
  • Reassess your forum strategy. The 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law changes how PRC courts supervise arbitral proceedings and enforce awards, evaluate whether a non‑PRC arbitration seat or direct Taiwan litigation better protects enforceability against your counterparty’s assets.
  • Upgrade jurisdiction and security clauses. Existing boilerplate may be inadequate. Draft express consent‑to‑jurisdiction provisions, specify a non‑PRC arbitration seat where appropriate, and build in escrow or guarantee mechanisms that reduce post‑award enforcement risk.

What Changed in 2026, PRC Mainland Arbitration Law and Taiwan Developments

The regulatory environment for Taiwan cross‑border commercial disputes has shifted on both sides of the strait in the opening months of 2026. Understanding each change individually, and the combined effect on enforceability, is essential before selecting a dispute‑resolution strategy.

Key PRC Law Provisions That Matter to Taiwan Parties

The Mainland Arbitration Law 2026 represents the PRC’s most significant overhaul of its arbitration framework in decades. Industry observers expect several provisions to have a direct practical impact on Taiwan parties’ enforcement planning:

  • Expanded court supervision of arbitral proceedings. The revised law broadens the grounds on which PRC courts may intervene in or set aside arbitral awards rendered with a PRC seat, including enhanced review of procedural fairness and public‑policy compliance. The likely practical effect will be greater uncertainty for Taiwan claimants relying on PRC‑seated awards.
  • Revised interim‑relief provisions. The 2026 law updates the mechanism by which parties may apply to PRC courts for preservation measures in support of arbitration, potentially affecting the timing and scope of asset freezes available to Taiwan creditors.
  • Enforcement against PRC parties. New provisions governing the recognition and enforcement of both domestic and foreign‑related awards alter the procedural pathway Taiwan parties must navigate to collect against mainland assets. Early indications suggest the revised framework introduces additional procedural steps that could extend enforcement timelines.
  • Transitional rules. The law includes transitional provisions governing cases commenced before implementation, Taiwan parties with pending arbitrations should confirm which regime applies to their proceedings.

Taiwan Regulatory and Court Updates

Taiwan’s own legal landscape has not been static. Two developments in early 2026 carry direct implications for cross‑border commercial dispute resolution:

  • Constitutional Court decision (March 27, 2026). The Constitutional Court issued a significant ruling that addresses the scope of judicial review and procedural safeguards in commercial enforcement proceedings. The decision reinforces due‑process protections and clarifies the standard courts must apply when reviewing applications for recognition of foreign awards and judgments, a development that strengthens the procedural predictability of Taiwan as an enforcement forum.
  • FTC regulatory changes (early 2026). The Fair Trade Commission adopted amended rules affecting cross‑border commercial conduct, expanding the FTC’s reach over certain transactions with foreign elements. While primarily a regulatory‑enforcement matter, these changes can generate collateral disputes, and influence the choice of forum and governing‑law analysis in commercial contracts with PRC counterparties.

Timeline of Key 2026 Developments

Date Development Practical Impact
Early 2026 PRC Mainland Arbitration Law 2026 implementation New court‑supervision, interim‑relief, and enforcement provisions apply to PRC‑seated arbitrations and enforcement against mainland assets
March 27, 2026 Taiwan Constitutional Court decision Clarifies judicial‑review standard for recognition of foreign awards/judgments; strengthens due‑process safeguards in Taiwan enforcement proceedings
Early 2026 Taiwan FTC amended rules on cross‑border commercial conduct Expands FTC jurisdiction over certain cross‑border transactions; may generate collateral disputes and affect governing‑law/forum analysis

Choosing Forum for Cross‑Border Commercial Disputes Taiwan, Arbitration vs Litigation Decision Framework

Forum selection is the single highest‑leverage decision in any cross‑border litigation strategy. In the post‑2026 environment, the calculus has shifted. Before defaulting to a familiar arbitration institution or court, counsel should work through five strategic questions:

  1. Where are the opponent’s enforceable assets? If the PRC counterparty holds significant assets in Taiwan (bank accounts, real property, receivables from Taiwan customers), Taiwan litigation or a non‑PRC‑seated arbitration with enforcement directed at Taiwan courts may offer the fastest path to recovery.
  2. How critical is speed? Taiwan courts offer powerful interim measures, provisional attachment and evidence preservation, that can be obtained before or alongside arbitration. PRC court processes may now involve additional procedural layers under the 2026 law.
  3. Is confidentiality essential? Arbitration preserves confidentiality; Taiwan court proceedings are generally public. Weigh reputational considerations.
  4. Where is the evidence located? If key documents and witnesses are in Taiwan, Taiwan litigation avoids cross‑border evidence‑gathering complications. If evidence spans multiple jurisdictions, arbitration may offer more flexible procedural rules.
  5. What does the contract currently provide? Existing jurisdiction or arbitration clauses may constrain options. Review enforceability of existing clauses under both the PRC 2026 law and Taiwan law before commencing proceedings.

Comparison Table, Arbitration vs Litigation Taiwan China

Forum Typical Advantages Enforcement and Risk Notes (2026 Considerations)
Arbitration, non‑PRC seat (e.g., Singapore, Hong Kong, CAA‑Taipei) Neutral forum; party autonomy over procedure and language; confidentiality; broad international enforceability Enforcement against PRC mainland assets still requires PRC court recognition, the 2026 law may introduce additional procedural hurdles; consider selecting a seat in a jurisdiction whose awards PRC courts have historically recognized; combine with security provisions targeting non‑PRC assets
Arbitration, PRC seat (e.g., CIETAC Beijing/Shanghai) Direct enforcement pathway in PRC courts; familiar to PRC counterparties Expanded PRC court supervision under the 2026 law increases set‑aside risk; Taiwan parties may face procedural disadvantages; awards may be harder to enforce outside the PRC if the PRC seat creates enforcement complications in third jurisdictions
Taiwan litigation Strong interim measures (provisional attachment, injunctions, evidence preservation); direct enforcement over Taiwan‑located assets; procedural predictability reinforced by March 2026 Constitutional Court ruling Recognition of PRC judgments/awards in Taiwan courts remains subject to Taiwan’s own review procedure; PRC counterparties may resist Taiwan jurisdiction; enforcement against purely mainland assets requires separate PRC proceedings
PRC court litigation Direct enforcement over mainland assets; potentially faster collection if assets are exclusively in the PRC Political and procedural risks for Taiwan parties; PRC court judgments are difficult to enforce outside the PRC; limited transparency; Taiwan courts apply their own review criteria when asked to recognize PRC judgments

When Arbitration Still Makes Sense (and Seat Selection Tips)

Arbitration remains the preferred forum when the counterparty’s assets are spread across multiple jurisdictions (leveraging the New York Convention’s enforcement framework), when confidentiality is important, or when the contract involves parties from more than two jurisdictions. The critical seat‑selection tip for 2026: favour a non‑PRC seat, Singapore, Hong Kong, or Taipei under the Chinese Arbitration Association (CAA‑Taipei) rules, to reduce exposure to expanded PRC court supervision. The CAA‑Taipei offers institutional support, emergency arbitrator provisions, and awards that are enforceable domestically in Taiwan. For a deeper analysis of how local courts intervene in international arbitration, see the linked resource.

When Taiwan Litigation Is Preferable

Taiwan litigation is the stronger choice when the PRC counterparty holds identifiable assets in Taiwan, when injunctive relief is needed urgently, or when evidence is concentrated on the island. The March 2026 Constitutional Court decision has reinforced confidence in Taiwan’s procedural framework for commercial enforcement. Taiwan courts have a track record of handling complex cross‑border commercial disputes and granting effective provisional relief. For guidance on preparing for hearings in either forum, consult the linked guide.

Enforcing Awards and Foreign Judgments in Taiwan, Step‑by‑Step Checklist

Whether you hold an arbitral award from an international institution or a foreign court judgment, enforcing it in Taiwan follows a structured procedure governed by Taiwan’s Arbitration Act and Code of Civil Procedure. The process is well‑established, but careful preparation of documents and compliance with authentication requirements is essential to avoid procedural delays.

Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Taiwan, Exact Documents and Legal Grounds

To enforce an arbitral award in Taiwan, the applicant must petition the competent Taiwan district court for recognition and enforcement. The following checklist outlines the core requirements:

  1. Original arbitral award (or certified copy), must be the final, binding award as issued by the tribunal.
  2. Arbitration agreement, the original contract or separate submission agreement containing the arbitration clause.
  3. Certified translations, if the award or agreement is not in Chinese, provide Mandarin translations certified by a sworn translator or notarized as accurate.
  4. Authentication/legalisation, for awards issued outside Taiwan, the award and related documents typically require authentication by the local Taiwan representative office (e.g., TECO) or through applicable apostille/consular channels. Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice provides guidance on authentication requirements for specific jurisdictions.
  5. Petition for recognition, file a formal petition (聲請裁定認可) with the Taiwan district court having jurisdiction over the respondent or the respondent’s assets in Taiwan.
  6. Evidence of service, demonstrate that the respondent was properly notified of the arbitration and had an opportunity to present its case.
  7. Filing fee, pay the applicable court filing fee as prescribed by the Taiwan Judicial Yuan’s fee schedule.

Taiwan courts will grant recognition unless one of the statutory grounds for refusal applies. The Taiwan Judicial Yuan’s published procedural guidance and the CAA‑Taipei’s institutional resources provide detailed instructions for each step.

Recognition of Foreign Judgments in Taiwan, Key Differences and Procedural Steps

Recognition of foreign judgments in Taiwan follows a separate statutory pathway under the Code of Civil Procedure. Key distinctions from arbitral‑award enforcement include:

  • Reciprocity requirement. Taiwan courts apply a reciprocity test: the foreign court’s jurisdiction must recognize Taiwan judgments under similar conditions. This is a threshold issue that must be assessed jurisdiction by jurisdiction.
  • Public‑policy review. The judgment must not contravene Taiwan public policy or mandatory laws.
  • Proper jurisdiction and due process. The foreign court must have had jurisdiction under Taiwan’s conflict‑of‑laws principles, and the respondent must have received proper notice and an opportunity to defend.
  • Finality. The foreign judgment must be final and binding in the rendering jurisdiction.

For PRC court judgments specifically, Taiwan courts apply their own assessment criteria under the Act Governing Relations Between the People of the Taiwan Area and the Mainland Area. Industry observers note that recognition of PRC judgments is not automatic and involves a court‑supervised review process that examines public‑policy compliance and procedural regularity.

Top 5 Grounds Taiwan Courts Use to Refuse Enforcement (and How to Mitigate Them)

  • Lack of valid arbitration agreement. Mitigation: ensure the arbitration clause is clear, written, and covers the specific dispute. Avoid ambiguous or pathological clauses.
  • Improper notice or denial of opportunity to be heard. Mitigation: meticulously document all procedural notifications and confirm service addresses with the respondent.
  • Award exceeds the scope of the arbitration agreement. Mitigation: ensure the tribunal’s terms of reference or procedural order clearly delineate the scope of claims.
  • Contravention of Taiwan public policy or mandatory law. Mitigation: review the subject matter and relief sought for any conflict with Taiwan’s fundamental legal principles before commencing arbitration.
  • Award has been set aside or suspended in the seat jurisdiction. Mitigation: choose a seat jurisdiction with a strong rule‑of‑law record and limited grounds for judicial interference, a non‑PRC seat reduces this risk in light of the 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law’s expanded court‑supervision provisions.

Expected Enforcement Timeline in Taiwan

Stage Estimated Duration Notes
Document preparation and authentication 2–6 weeks Depends on jurisdiction of origin and authentication pathway; plan for delays in consular processing
Filing petition for recognition 1–2 weeks Court filing is procedurally straightforward once documents are complete
Court review and ruling 2–6 months Uncontested cases may resolve faster; contested recognition can extend to 6+ months if the respondent raises statutory defences
Enforcement (execution) 1–3 months Once recognition is granted, standard enforcement procedures apply, attachment of bank accounts, property, receivables
Appeal (if contested) 6–12+ months Respondent may appeal the recognition decision; provisional measures can protect the applicant’s position during appeal

Note: These timelines are indicative ranges based on typical Taiwan court practice. Actual durations vary by case complexity, court caseload, and respondent conduct.

Interim Measures and Asset Preservation in Taiwan

One of Taiwan’s strongest advantages as a dispute‑resolution or enforcement forum is its robust framework for interim measures. For Taiwan cross‑border commercial disputes, securing assets before a final judgment or award is often the difference between a meaningful recovery and an empty victory.

Emergency Arbitration Relief vs Taiwan Court Orders, Interaction and Strategy

Taiwan courts provide three primary categories of interim relief available to parties in cross‑border disputes:

  • Provisional attachment (假扣押). Freezes the respondent’s assets (bank accounts, real property, movable assets) pending the outcome of litigation or arbitration. Requires the applicant to demonstrate a prima facie claim and risk of dissipation, and to post a security deposit (typically a percentage of the claim amount set by the court).
  • Provisional injunction (假處分). Restrains the respondent from specific actions (e.g., transferring shares, disposing of disputed property). Available where monetary damages alone would be inadequate.
  • Evidence preservation order (證據保全). Compels the preservation of documents, electronic records, or physical evidence at risk of destruction. Particularly valuable in cross‑border cases where evidence may be moved offshore.

These Taiwan court measures operate independently of arbitration proceedings. A party that has commenced or intends to commence arbitration, whether domestically at the CAA‑Taipei or under international rules, can simultaneously apply to a Taiwan court for provisional attachment or injunction. The two tracks are complementary: the court secures assets while the tribunal resolves the merits.

Emergency arbitrator provisions under the CAA‑Taipei rules and many international arbitration institutions (ICC, SIAC, HKIAC) offer an additional layer of urgent relief. However, emergency arbitrator orders may require separate court enforcement. The practical recommendation is to pursue both tracks in parallel when time is critical.

Cross‑Border Evidence Gathering and Letters Rogatory

When evidence is located outside Taiwan, parties may need to use letters rogatory or other international legal‑assistance mechanisms. Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice coordinates outbound requests for judicial assistance. For inbound requests, Taiwan courts are generally receptive to assisting foreign proceedings, although the process requires compliance with Taiwan’s procedural requirements. In PRC‑related cases, evidence gathering is channelled through the cross‑strait legal‑assistance framework, which introduces additional procedural layers and timing considerations.

Contract Drafting and Pre‑Dispute Toolkit for Cross‑Border Commercial Disputes Taiwan

The most cost‑effective risk management happens before a dispute arises. In 2026, jurisdiction clause drafting has become more consequential, the wrong clause can route a dispute into a forum where enforcement is uncertain, while a well‑drafted clause can secure enforceability and speed recovery. Below are the key drafting priorities and two sample clause templates.

Core Drafting Priorities

  • Jurisdiction and arbitration clause specificity. Specify the exact arbitration institution, rules, seat, language, and number of arbitrators. Avoid ambiguous “either party may choose” formulations that create jurisdictional disputes.
  • Choice of law. Expressly designate governing law. Taiwan law or a neutral third‑country law (e.g., Singapore, England) is generally preferable to PRC law for Taiwan claimants seeking to enforce outside the mainland.
  • Seat selection. For arbitration, select a non‑PRC seat to avoid expanded PRC court supervision under the 2026 law. Taipei (CAA‑Taipei), Singapore (SIAC), and Hong Kong (HKIAC) are strong options.
  • Security and escrow provisions. Require performance guarantees, bank guarantees, or escrow deposits that provide a pre‑positioned enforcement target outside the PRC.
  • Express consent to Taiwan jurisdiction for enforcement. Include a clause by which the PRC counterparty expressly consents to the jurisdiction of Taiwan courts for the purpose of enforcing awards or judgments and any related interim measures.
  • Waiver of sovereign immunity (where applicable). For contracts with state‑owned enterprises or government‑linked entities, include express waivers of immunity from jurisdiction and execution.
  • Assignment and security interest clauses. Permit assignment of contractual rights to facilitate collection and provide for charging orders over receivables.

Sample Jurisdiction Clause (Taiwan Litigation, Optimised for Enforceability)

The following sample is provided for illustrative purposes. Parties should obtain local legal advice before adopting any clause.

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity, or termination, shall be submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of [Taipei/relevant city], Taiwan (Republic of China). Each party irrevocably submits to the jurisdiction of such courts and waives any objection to the exercise of such jurisdiction on grounds of venue, inconvenient forum, or similar grounds. Each party further consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of Taiwan for the purpose of any provisional or protective measures, including provisional attachment and evidence preservation orders.”

Key features: exclusive jurisdiction locks the forum; express waiver of forum non conveniens; separate consent for interim measures ensures provisional relief is available regardless of any parallel proceedings.

Sample Arbitration Clause (Non‑PRC Seat with Security Provisions)

“Any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be resolved by arbitration administered by [the Chinese Arbitration Association, Taipei / the Singapore International Arbitration Centre] in accordance with its [Arbitration Rules / Rules of Arbitration] in effect at the time of the arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be [Taipei / Singapore]. The language of the arbitration shall be [English / Mandarin]. The tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s). The parties agree that any award rendered shall be final and binding and may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction, including the courts of Taiwan and [other jurisdictions where the respondent holds assets].

Each party irrevocably consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of Taiwan for the purpose of enforcing any award and for obtaining provisional measures in support of the arbitration. [Party B] shall, within [30] days of execution of this Agreement, provide a bank guarantee or escrow deposit in the amount of [USD ___] to secure its obligations hereunder, such guarantee to remain in force until [final settlement / expiry of the enforcement period].

Key features: non‑PRC seat avoids 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law court supervision; express consent to Taiwan court jurisdiction for enforcement and interim measures; built‑in security mechanism reduces post‑award collection risk.

Practical Playbook, Three Scenarios

The following scenarios illustrate how the 2026 changes affect real‑world decision‑making for Taiwan businesses involved in cross‑border commercial disputes.

Scenario 1, Taiwan supplier vs non‑paying PRC buyer (buyer has Taiwan bank accounts). The PRC buyer has stopped payment on a significant purchase order. The buyer maintains correspondent bank accounts in Taiwan. Recommended actions: (1) Apply immediately for provisional attachment over the buyer’s Taiwan bank accounts. (2) Commence Taiwan court proceedings for the contractual claim, Taiwan litigation is preferred because enforceable assets are local. (3) Simultaneously send a demand letter identifying the preservation order to incentivise settlement.

Scenario 2, Taiwan creditor holds a Singapore‑seated ICC award against a PRC entity with both Taiwan and PRC assets. Recommended actions: (1) File for recognition and enforcement of the award in the Taiwan district court, target the Taiwan‑located assets first using the enforcement checklist above. (2) Apply for provisional attachment in Taiwan pending the recognition proceedings. (3) Separately assess enforcement prospects in the PRC under the 2026 law, noting the expanded court‑supervision provisions, engage PRC local counsel for a parallel enforcement strategy.

Scenario 3, Foreign investor with cross‑border M&A dispute involving a Taiwan target and PRC parent. A dispute has arisen over representations and warranties in a share‑purchase agreement. Recommended actions: (1) Review the dispute‑resolution clause, if it specifies a PRC seat, assess renegotiation or evaluate whether the clause is enforceable under the governing law. (2) If assets are primarily in Taiwan, apply for interim measures in Taiwan courts while commencing arbitration in the designated seat. (3) For future transactions, insist on a non‑PRC arbitration seat and escrow provisions to mitigate enforcement risk.

Conclusion, Act Now to Protect Your Position

The 2026 changes to cross-border commercial disputes Taiwan businesses face demand immediate attention: reassess your forum strategy in light of the Mainland Arbitration Law’s expanded court supervision, leverage Taiwan’s strengthened procedural framework for interim relief and enforcement, and upgrade your contract clauses before the next deal closes. Consult an experienced Taiwan commercial litigator through the Taiwan lawyer directory to tailor these strategies to your specific situation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Wei Yang-Hung at Apollo Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Chinese Arbitration Association, Taipei (CAA‑Taipei), Procedures and Emergency Relief
  2. Chambers and Partners, Taiwan Dispute Resolution Overview
  3. Lee and Li, Taiwan Firm Alerts on Cross‑Border Enforcement
  4. PwC Taiwan, Cross‑Border Transactions and Litigation Services
  5. Taiwan Judicial Yuan, Court Rules and Recognition/Enforcement Practice
  6. Taiwan Ministry of Justice, Authentication and International Legal Assistance Guidance
  7. Chen and Lin, Firm Alert on PRC 2026 Arbitration Law

FAQs

How will the 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law affect enforcement of awards against PRC parties?
The 2026 law expands the grounds on which PRC courts may supervise or set aside arbitral awards with a PRC seat, and introduces revised procedural pathways for enforcement of both domestic and foreign‑related awards. Industry observers expect this to increase enforcement uncertainty for Taiwan parties relying on PRC‑seated arbitrations. The practical recommendation is to select a non‑PRC seat and target assets outside the mainland where possible.
Yes. Taiwan courts routinely recognise and enforce foreign arbitral awards. The applicant must file a petition for recognition with the competent district court, supported by the original award, the arbitration agreement, certified translations, and authenticated documents. Recognition will be granted unless one of the limited statutory refusal grounds applies.
The answer depends on asset location, speed requirements, confidentiality needs, and the existing contractual framework. As a general rule: if the counterparty holds enforceable assets in Taiwan, Taiwan litigation offers fast interim relief and direct enforcement; if assets are spread across multiple jurisdictions, non‑PRC‑seated arbitration leveraging the New York Convention framework is typically preferable. See the comparison table above for a detailed analysis.
Taiwan courts offer provisional attachment (freezing bank accounts and property), provisional injunctions (restraining specific conduct), and evidence preservation orders. These measures can be obtained before or alongside arbitration or litigation and typically require the applicant to post a security deposit.
The most effective clauses include: a non‑PRC arbitration seat provision, express consent to Taiwan court jurisdiction for enforcement and interim measures, governing‑law selection favouring Taiwan or neutral law, and security mechanisms such as bank guarantees or escrow deposits. See the sample clauses in the contract drafting section above.
From document preparation through court recognition to execution, the process typically ranges from approximately four to twelve months for uncontested matters. Contested cases involving appeals may take twelve months or longer. Provisional attachment can secure assets within days of filing.
A Taiwan court may set aside an award rendered in Taiwan on limited grounds, including invalidity of the arbitration agreement, procedural irregularity, the award exceeding the scope of submission, or contravention of public policy. For awards rendered outside Taiwan, the court’s review is limited to recognition and enforcement grounds, it cannot set aside a foreign award, though it may refuse recognition.
The core documents are: the original arbitral award (or certified copy), the arbitration agreement, certified Mandarin translations of all non‑Chinese documents, authentication by the relevant Taiwan representative office or through applicable apostille channels, the formal petition for recognition, evidence of proper service/notice to the respondent, and payment of the court filing fee.

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How the 2026 Mainland Arbitration Law and Taiwan's Early‑2026 Litigation Changes Affect Cross‑border Commercial Disputes, Practical Guidance for Taiwanese Businesses

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