Episódios
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What can an arbitration practitioner learn from the approach to criminal evidence? What duties does an arbitrator have to investigate suspected criminal activity? And why have the criminal courts ignored interim measures not to extradite parties to investment treaty claims? Angeline Welsh asks renowned criminal practitioner Tim Owen QC for the answers to these questions.
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Angeline Welsh speaks to Sarah Grimmer and Joe Liu of HKIAC about the recent Queen Mary/White & Case arbitration survey asks what lessons the arbitration seat of London can learn from Hong Kong.
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Speaking alongside Prime Minister Theresa May of a post-Brexit UK/US trade agreement at the G20 summit in July, President Trump said:
“We have been working on a trade deal which will be a very, very big deal a very powerful deal, great for both countries and I think we will have that done very, very quickly.”
So what might that trade agreement look like? In our latest podcast, Angeline Welsh asks Patrick Pearsall, former Chief of Investment Arbitration at the US State Department, and Luis González García, Brexit expert and former Deputy General Counsel for International Trade Negotiations of the Government of Mexico. -
In this episode, Stuart H. Newberger appears in conversation with Helen Mountfield QC to discuss his new book, The Forgotten Flight, with introductory remarks from Ben Emmerson QC.
On September 19, 1989, 170 people were killed when UTA Flight 772 was destroyed by a suitcase bomb planted by Libyan agents. Despite being one of the deadliest terror attacks in history, outside France it remained overshadowed by the Lockerbie bombing that had taken place ten months earlier. Both attacks were carried out at the instruction of Libya’s dictator Muammer Qaddafi, but while ‘Lockerbie’ became synonymous with international terrorism, UTA 772 became the ‘forgotten flight’. As a lawyer, Stuart H. Newberger represented the families of the seven Americans killed in the UTA 772 attack. Now he tells the story of the ‘forgotten flight’ for the first time. -
This episode will consider the high profile phone hacking scandal, which shocked and fascinated the British public and brought down one of the UK's leading newspapers, The News of the World. This is well known – less well known is the role arbitration played in resolving many of the claims which followed. Angeline Welsh and Guy Vassall-Adams QC explore the unexpected overlap between arbitration and media and information law.
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In this podcast, Professor Christian Tams and Angeline Welsh discuss State Succession. The once relatively dormant doctrine of State Succession - which notably deals with the application of treaties to newly-established States - is back on the agenda with renewed vigour. Its most recent high profile exploration has been in the Sanum litigation, which turned on the application of PRC/Laos BIT to investors incorporated in Macao . The CIS region in particular may still have issues to grapple with, as investor invoke BITs concluded with the Soviet Union in proceedings against successor States such as Kazakhstan. Looking ahead, claims for independence and statehood - from Catalonia to Scotland and even, fleetingly, London in the immediate Brexit aftermath - would directly implicate the doctrine of State succession.
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In this podcast, Professor Sean Murphy and Alison Macdonald discuss bilateral claims commissions. The mass resolution of claims arising out of a particular inter-State dispute differs in many respects from more familiar ad hoc arbitrations. Sean and Alison consider why particular conflicts such as Iran/US, Eritrea/Ethiopia and Kuwait/Iraq, have led to such commissions being set up. They look at the practical differences between running claims in a claims commission as opposed to an arbitration, the enforcement of awards, and the important contribution which a standing tribunal can make to international law. Finally, they consider the types of conflict which could lead to such commissions being set up in the future.
Professor Sean Murphy is an Associate Member of Matrix, Patricia Roberts Harris Research Professor of Law at George Washington University, and a Member of the UN International Law Commission. Alison Macdonald is a member of Matrix and has an extensive civil, criminal and arbitration practice, in both domestic and international courts and tribunals.