International Arbitration
International arbitration and mediation resolves cross-border commercial disputes through arbitral proceedings under leading institutional rules. The Gulf’s commercial disputes increasingly involve multi-jurisdictional elements — parties from different legal traditions, assets across multiple countries, and the complexity of contracts governed by different laws. Arbitration provides: neutrality (neither party’s home courts), enforceability (New York Convention recognition in 170+ countries), confidentiality (proceedings are private, unlike court litigation), and the party autonomy (choosing arbitrators, procedural rules, seat, and language) that sophisticated parties demand.
Arbitration Advisory
Kaelo advises on: arbitration strategy (assessing whether arbitration or litigation is the optimal dispute resolution mechanism), institutional rules selection (DIFC-LCIA, SIAC, ICC, LCIA, DIAC — each with different procedural characteristics, costs, and enforceability profiles), arbitrator appointment (selecting arbitrators with appropriate subject-matter expertise, cultural understanding, and reputation), evidence management (document production, witness statements, expert reports), and the enforcement of arbitral awards across Gulf and Asian jurisdictions. Our legal practice covers the full arbitration lifecycle from initial assessment through award enforcement.
Seat Selection
Arbitration seat selection — the legal jurisdiction whose procedural law governs the arbitration — has profound implications: DIFC provides English common law arbitration law with the DIFC-LCIA centre, Singapore provides the Model Law framework with SIAC (one of the world’s busiest arbitral institutions), Paris provides ICC arbitration with French procedural law, and London provides LCIA with the English Arbitration Act. Each seat offers different levels of judicial support, limited grounds for challenge, and enforcement efficiency.
International arbitration is where the Gulf’s multi-jurisdictional commercial landscape meets the global dispute resolution infrastructure — and the advisory mandate is to ensure disputes are resolved efficiently, enforceably, and without the relationship damage that adversarial litigation creates.