Transnational Arbitration

21st ITA-ASIL Conference

Courts, Arbitral Tribunals, and the Challenge of Building a Constructive Relationship

Washington, D.C.

Past Event

MCLE Credit available

Washington Hilton
1919 Connecticut Ave NW
Washington, DC 20009

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Registrar: +1.972.244.3403
ITA: +1.972.244.3414
Fax: +1.972.244.3401
E-Mail: ita@cailaw.org

Overview

The ½-day ITA-ASIL Conference is presented annually by the ITA Academic Council with the American Society of International Law (ASIL) immediately preceding the ASIL Annual MeetingScholarship is a hallmark of this conference.

Arbitration is frequently described as a “denationalized” dispute-settlement process. The description suggests that arbitral rules and practice should enjoy a large measure of autonomy from national courts. Arbitration idealists may envision a world in which arbitration operates autonomously, like the lex mercatoria of academic yore. An arbitration realist recognizes that national courts are unlikely to give up entirely the right to police arbitral inputs and outputs, even if they complain that most courts intervene too willingly, or too ineptly. Courts will intervene, but when should they intervene? How should they intervene?

Recent high-profile cases in the U.S. and Europe illustrate that questions about the roles of national courts in policing international commercial or investor-state arbitration have high stakes.

Our keynote address will examine the contemporary landscape as to relations between courts and international arbitration.  

Two panels will then discuss issues relating to judicial engagement pre-award and post-award, such as whether, when, and how courts should intervene to address allegations of arbitral misconduct, fraud, or corruption and whether, when, and how courts should issue anti-suit injunctions aimed at preventing parties from enforcing arbitral agreements or awards, and other issues relating to enforcement. And panelists will frame their remarks and observations around a more fundamental question: how might advocates of arbitral autonomy and defenders of court intervention recommend designing a system in which tribunals and courts viewed themselves not as escaping the jurisdiction of the one or of policing the conduct of the other, but as engaged in a constructive and mutually respectful relationship jointly promoting justice?

Conference Co-Chairs

Picture of Susan Karamanian

Dean Susan Karamanian
Hamad Bin Khalifa University College of Law
Doha, QATAR

Picture of Jason Yackee

Prof. Jason Yackee
Professor of Law
University of Wisconsin Law School
Madison, WI

Schedule and Faculty

8:00-9:00 am - Registration and Continental Breakfast


9:00-9:10 am - Welcome and Introduction

  • Tomasz Sikora, ITA Chair; Exxon Mobil Corporation, Spring, Texas
  • Prof. Gregory Shaffer, ASIL President; Georgetown Law School, Washington, D.C.

9:10-9:35 am - Keynote Address: Courts and Arbitration: A Complex Partnership

  • Hon. Diane P. Wood, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Chicago, Illinois

9:35-10:50 am - Panel 1: Courts and Pre-Award Supervision

Moderator: Prof. Jason Yackee, University of Wisconsin Law School, Madison, Wisconsin

Panelists:

  • Prof. Jack Coe, Pepperdine Caruso School of Law, Malibu, California
  • Ashwita Ambast, Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague, The Netherlands
  • Analia Gonzalez, Baker Hostetler LLP, Washington, D.C.

10:50- 11:00 am - BREAK


11:00 am - 12:15 pm - Panel 2: Courts and Post-Award Supervision

Moderator: Dean Susan L. Karamanian, Hamad Bin Khalifa University College of Law, Doha, Qatar

Panelists:

  • Prof. Eric De Brabandere, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
  • Marney Cheek, Covington & Burling LLP, Washington, D.C.
  • Uche Onwuamaegbu, ArentFox Schiff, Washington, D.C.

12:15 – 12:30 pm - Concluding Remarks

  • Prof. Victoria Sahani, Chair, ITA Academic Council; Boston University School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts

12:30-2:00 pm - Networking Luncheon

MCLE Credit

This program is approved by the State Bar of Texas for a total of 3 hours, no ethics. Course ID Number:174233950. Credit hours for other states will vary and are subject to each state’s approval and credit rounding rules.

For this conference, ITA will directly apply (if requested) for course accreditation in the following states: California, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia. Some of these states may not approve a program for credit hours before the program occurs. Attorneys may be eligible to receive CLE credit through reciprocity or attorney self-submission in other states. Attorneys filing by self-submission in certain states may be required to pay an additional fee. ITA conferences are typically accredited by all mandatory CLE states.

Sponsorship Opportunities

Lanyard Sponsor - $ 2,500 exclusive - SOLD

  • Exposure to thousands of ITA and ASIL constituents
  • Recognition as a Sponsor on the conference websites, in the conference brochure, in e-marketing, on the conference platform and at the conference
  • Name/logo on the conference name badge lanyard
  • Name/logo on the conference website with link to firm/company page
  • 2 complimentary registrants at the ITA-ASIL conference
  • An opportunity to display company/firm materials at the conference, and to add links/materials to your online exhibitor booth on the conference platform
  • Post-conference recognition at ITA’s website and in its quarterly newsletter News & Notes

Networking Luncheon Sponsor - $ 2,000 exclusive

  • Exposure to thousands of ITA and ASIL constituents
  • Recognition as a Sponsor on the conference websites, in the conference brochure, in e-marketing, on the conference platform and at the conference
  • Name/logo on the conference website with link to firm/company page
  • Recognition at the Luncheon
  • 2 complimentary registrants at the ITA-ASIL conference
  • Up to 3 complimentary guests at the Luncheon
  • An opportunity to display company/firm materials at the conference, and to add links/materials to your online exhibitor booth on the conference platform
  • Post-conference recognition at ITA’s website and in its quarterly newsletter News & Notes

Breakfast and Coffee Breaks Sponsor - $ 2,000 each - SOLD

  • Exposure to thousands of ITA and ASIL constituents
  • Recognition as a Sponsor on the conference websites, in the conference brochure, in e-marketing, on the conference platform and at the conference
  • Name/logo on the conference website with link to firm/company page
  • 2 complimentary registrants at the ITA-ASIL conference
  • An opportunity to display company/firm materials at the conference, and to add links/materials to your online exhibitor booth on the conference platform• Post-conference recognition at ITA’s website and in its quarterly newsletter News & Notes

Exhibitor - $ 1,500 each

  • Exposure to thousands of ITA and ASIL constituents
  • Name/logo on the conference website and the conference platform with link to firm/company page
  • An opportunity to display company/firm materials at the conference, and to add links/materials to your online exhibitor booth on the conference platform
  • Post-conference recognition at ITA’s website and in its quarterly newsletter News & Notes

Other Information

Photo/Audio/Video Release

Registration for or attendance at this event acknowledges consent to be recorded or photographed. We reserve the right to use any photograph/video taken at our events, without the expressed written permission of those included within the photograph/video. We may use the photograph/video in publications or other media material produced, used or contracted including but not limited to: brochures, invitations, books, newspapers, magazines, television, websites, annual reports, newsletters, etc. To ensure the privacy of individuals, images will not be identified using full names or personal identifying information without written approval from the photographed subject.

Nondiscriminatory Policy

The Center for American and International Law does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity, or any other protected status in educational activities, scholarship programs or admissions.

Privacy Policy

We do not sell or rent information to any outside parties. By providing your information, you will receive postal and electronic communications from the Institute for Transnational Arbitration (ITA) of The Center for American and International Law (CAIL) in accordance with CAIL's Privacy Policy. If we co-sponsor a program with another organization, information may be shared between the parties. All such co-sponsors will be identified on the event details and registration page. At any point, you can opt-out or unsubscribe by selecting either link at the bottom of each email or call us at 972.244.3400.

Sponsor an Event

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Lanyard Sponsor

Breakfast and Coffee Breaks Sponsor