Streamlining Arbitration of the Complex Case - Chapter 5 - AAA Handbook on Commercial Arbitration, Third Edition
John Wilkinson is Of Counsel at Fulton, Rowe, Hart & Coon in New York City. He has served on the American Arbitration Association’s Large, Complex Case Panel and on its Greater New York Advisory Council for Large Complex Cases. He is the editor co-author of CONOVAN LEISURE ADR PRACTICE BOOK, John Wiley & Sons (1991) and is a member of the Board of Editors of the American Arbitration Association’s ADR Currents.
Originally from:
AAA Handbook on Commercial Arbitration, Third Edition
CHAPTER 5
STREAMLINING ARBITRATION OF THE COMPLEX CASE
John Wilkinson
I. Introduction
The primary reason for the mushrooming popularity of arbitration for large cases is that business managers and their general counsel have increasingly recognized that this form of dispute resolution provides a faster, more cost-effective result than litigation. And, perhaps most importantly, it provides a result that is at least as fair as a decision by an impartial jury or judge.
While these benefits are achieved in the great majority of complex arbitrations, they must never be assumed or taken for granted since effective case management is invariably required for an arbitration to be as brief as possible while affording a fair hearing to both sides. In assessing whether an arbitration of a complex dispute has been effectively managed, one must consider a number of important factors, in addition to counting the number of hearing days, since hearings in complex cases are necessarily quite extensive-even when handled in the most cost-effective way possible.
Arbitrators who serve on the AAA’s newly qualified roster of neutrals, and have under¬gone its recently enhanced arbitrator-training program, are well equipped to achieve a cost-effective, fair result in a complex commercial dispute. Still, arbitrators can and should strive to improve the process. This chapter suggests some specific approaches that can shorten the arbitration process in certain circumstances without sacrificing fairness.