Julio César Betancourt: The Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (1915-2015)
I. International Arbitration Law, Arbitral Jurisdiction, and Arbitral Institutions
1: William W Park: Explaining arbitration law
2: Karl-Heinz Böckstiegel: Experiences and suggestions regarding the functioning of international arbitration institutions
3: V V Veeder: The 2014 new LCIA rules: An introductory explanation
II. Understanding the Users of International Arbitration
4: Peter J Rees: Putting the client first
5: Mauro Rubino-Sammartano: How easy is it not to take adequate care of the proper expectations of the parties?
III. International Arbitration Agreements: Issues and Perspectives
6: Lord Saville: Some reflections on the making of international arbitration agreements for the resolution of commercial disputes
7: John J Barceló III: Arbitrability decisions before, during, and after arbitration
8: Neil Kaplan and Olga Boltenko: The dangers of neglect: Governing law of arbitration agreements
9: Renato Nazzini: The law governing the arbitration agreement: A transnational solution?
10: Michael Young: Identifying the language of an arbitration when the arbitration clause is silent
IV. Arbitral Procedure and Procedural Misdemeanour
11: Hilary Heilbron: Is international arbitration becoming too confrontational and counterintuitive? And some guidelines as to how not to irritate a tribunal!
12: Elizabeth Snodgrass: Procedural efficiency in international commercial arbitration: Building it into the process
13: Lord Hacking and Sophia Berry: Ethics in arbitration: Party and arbitral misconduct
V. Emergency Arbitrators and Interim Relief
14: Doug Jones: Emergency arbitrators and court-ordered interim measures: Is the choice important?
15: Grant Hanessian: Legal standards applicable to deciding applications for interim relief
VI. Discovery and Document Production
16: Alexander Yanos: Discovery in arbitration: Can parties use 28 USC § 1782 to circumvent the process ordered by the arbitral tribunal?
17: Mark McNeill and Margaret Clare Ryan: Meeting the requirements of article 3(3) of the IBA rules: Recommendations for successful requests for document production
VII. Witnesses and Perjury
18: Lawrence W Newman: Cross-examination of fact witness statements in international arbitration
19: Bernardo M Cremades: The expert witness in international arbitration
20: Audley Sheppard: Oaths and perjury
VIII. Arbitrators' Decision-Making Power and Arbitral Tribunals' Cessation of Functions
21: Margaret L Moses: Inherent and implied powers of arbitrators
22: Sébastien Besson: Good (and bad) initiatives of arbitrators: Where to draw the line between activism and passivity?
23: Thomas Schultz and Robert Kovacs: The law is what the arbitrator had for breakfast: How income, reputation, justice, and reprimand act as determinants of arbitrator behaviour
24: Greg Fullelove: Functus officio?
IX. Costs, Funding, and Ideas for Optimization
25: Michael O'Reilly: The harmonization of costs practices in international arbitration: The search for the Holy Grail
26: Joe Tirado, Daniel Meagher, and Arpan Gupta: The costs and funding of international arbitration
27: Marie Berard: 'Other costs' in international arbitration: A review of the recoverability of internal and third-party funding costs
28: Jeffrey Waincymer: Optimizing the use of mediation in international arbitration: A cost-benefit analysis of 'two hat' versus 'two people' models
X. Judicial Review, Judicial Performance, and Enforcement
29: Sir Bernard Rix: Judicial review of the merits of arbitration awards under English law
30: S I Strong: Improving judicial performance in matters involving international arbitration
31: Alex Mills: The principled English ambivalence to law and dispute resolution beyond the state
XI. Public Policy and Abuse of Process
32: Stavros Brekoulakis: Public policy rules in English arbitration law
33: David J Sandy: The role of abuse of process in protecting the integrity of arbitration awards
XII. International Arbitration: Myths and Perspectives
34: Gordon Blanke: Arbitration in the UAE: Demystifying the myths
XIII. Dispute Resolution in the Construction Industry
35: Thomas J Stipanowich: Managing construction conflict: Unfinished revolution, continuing evolution
36: Andrew Tweeddale and Keren Tweeddale: Shifting the burden of proof: Revisiting adjudication decisions
XIV. Final Reflections and Looking Ahead
37: Martin Hunter: Recollections of past events and reflections on future trends