0 present participle of arbitrate
1 to make a judgment in an argument, usually because asked to do so by those involved:
Though institutions are limited in arbitrating conflict, they can provide linguistic and procedural parameters for political competition regarding contentious issues such as ethnicity.
The lowland regional states have neither democratic traditions, nor disciplined ruling parties capable of arbitrating interest disputes.
However, organizing behavior requires additional representations and processes which are not "early" sensing or "late" motion: structures for sequencing actions and arbitrating between behavior subsystems.
Section 10 was part of a symbolic and almost completely ineffective statute that was advertised as an attempt to establish a legal framework for arbitrating railroad labor disputes.
Congress's decision to pass the largely symbolic statute had more to do with various subsidiary goals that had little bearing on arbitrating or otherwise settling actual disputes.
In my view, we need a licensing and arbitrating body in this growing industry.
There can be no point in arbitrating between two people who agree.
In any case, it is a question of arbitrating in a dispute.