Investment Arbitration: Mass Claims - WAMR 2014 Vol. 8, No. 3
Author(s):
S. I. Strong
Michael Waibel
Samuel Wordsworth
Page Count:
20 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
December, 2013
Jurisdictions:
Description:
Originally From World Arbitration and Mediation Review (WAMR)
Preview Page
In 2011, the investment world was rocked by the preliminary
award on jurisdiction and admissibility in Abaclat v. Argentine
Republic,1 which allowed 60,000 Italian claimants to assert their
claims at the same time. Abaclat was recently cited with approval
by a majority of arbitrators in Ambiente Ufficio S.p.A. v. Argentine
Republic,2 which also arose out of Argentina’s 2001 default on its
sovereign bonds. The panel discussed whether and to what extent
these decisions open the door to more mass arbitrations in the
investment context.
PROF. STRONG: After having heard the last panel’s excellent
discussion of class claims in arbitration, we are now going to
return to the issue of mass claims in the investment context.
Although this issue was covered by Carolyn Lamm in her keynote
address, our second panel is going to come at the issue from a
slightly different perspective, not only discussing the groundbreaking
jurisdictional award and dissent in Abaclat but also
taking into account more recent developments, including the
decision in Ambiente Ufficio. Among other things, our two
speakers will consider whether and to what extent mass
investment arbitration will arise in the future, a question that was
briefly considered by Carolyn earlier today.
The members of this second panel are uniquely situated to
discuss these issues. Our first speaker is Michael Waibel of the
University of Cambridge, who is doubtless known to all of you as
the author of “Opening Pandora’s Box: Sovereign Bonds in
International Arbitration.”3 “Opening Pandora’s Box” not only won
the ASIL Francis Deák Prize in 2008, but was one of the first major
pieces published on Argentina’s sovereign bond crisis. Michael
has continued his work in this field with a book entitled Sovereign
Defaults Before International Courts and Tribunals,4 which won
the European Society of International Law Book Prize in 2012.
the European Society of International Law Book Prize in 2012.