Paul B. Klaas
North Coast Arbitration Chambers
309 Meadow Lane South
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55416
USA
Partner, Dorsey & Whitney law firm, Minneapolis and London (1977-2014); Lecturer on Law, Harvard Law School (Spring Term 2015); Adjunct Professor, Dartmouth College (Winter Term 2012, 2015)
Fellow, Chartered Institute of Arbitrators; Fellow and Board Member, College of Commercial Arbitrators; Fellow, American College of Trial Lawyers; Member, Lincoln’s Inn; Member, ICCA, IBA; Editorial Board Member, Mayo Clinic Proceedings medical journal
ICDR, LCIA, ICC, CPR, AAA; Chambers USA 2018 (Noted Practitioner – International Arbitrators)
Hundreds of arbitrations as counsel (1977-2014) and party-appointed arbitrator, sole arbitrator, chairman, and counsel (2002- present). Broad experience, particularly deep in high technology, medical, natural resources, aviation, telecommunications, and commercial matters. Taught the full-term international arbitration courses at the University of Minnesota Law School (2013-present) and the Harvard Law School (2015).
Author, “The Value of Peach Orchards: Perils of Arbitrator Subject-Matter Expertise,” Zeitschrift für Deutsches und Amerikanisches Recht [ZDAR] (July 2018), pp. 47-51
Author, “International Commercial Arbitration,” College of Commercial Arbitrators (2017), available at https://www.ccaarbitration.org/international-disputes/
Co-author, “International Arbitration Guidelines: Safe Ports for Arbitral Storms II” [interviewing prospective arbitrators, non-participating parties, drafting awards, interest and costs] Arbitration: The International Journal of Arbitration, Mediation, and Dispute Management (August 2017), Vol. 83, No. 3, pp. 318-329
Co-author, “International Arbitration Guidelines: Safe Ports for Arbitral Storms” [jurisdiction, interim measures, security for costs] Arbitration: The International Journal of Arbitration, Mediation, and Dispute Management (May 2016), Vol. 82, No. 2, pp. 169-182
Author, “Technical Expertise of Advocates and Arbitrators in International Technology Arbitrations: Benefit or Burden?” in Rovine, A. (ed.) Contemporary Issues in International Arbitration and Mediation: The Fordham Papers (2013), Chapter 21, pp. 429-444
Author, "Depositions: An Apologia," (2009) 25 Arbitration International pp. 553-567
Lead author, “When Patients are Harmed, But Are Not Wronged: Ethics, Law, and History,” Mayo Clinic Proceedings; Volume 89, Issue 9; pp. 1279-1286 (September 2014)