As an organisation committed to promoting international arbitration and educating the next generation of practitioners, the SCC occasionally publishes the work of students. The SCC is also a consistent early adopter of new technologies, including AI tools. This SCC Spotlight Talk is an AI-generated summary of Stockholm University International Commercial Arbitration Law graduate Leonardo Catovic’s master’s thesis, titled “Arbitrator Liability: Should arbitrators be immune from liability under ‘abuse of process’ claims?” (May 2024).
Published 2025-01-08
Leonardo explains that arbitrator liability varies significantly across jurisdictions. He outlines three main approaches:
Leonardo categorises misconduct into two types:
He discusses the spectrum of liability:
Leonardo shares interesting case studies from various countries:
Leonardo advocates for a harmonised approach to provide greater transparency and predictability. He proposes a model of qualified immunity to balance protection and accountability.
He emphasises that clear standards for arbitrator liability would enhance public trust in arbitration and could strengthen the arbitration framework by extending principles of immunity to organisations and institutions.
Leonardo's thesis calls for a harmonised model of qualified immunity to address inconsistencies in arbitrator liability standards, enhancing the transparency and reliability of international arbitration.
Read Leonardo Catovic’s master’s thesis here.