Disclosure of Third-Party Funding in Commercial Arbitration
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › peer-review
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Disclosure of Third-Party Funding in Commercial Arbitration. / Tufte-Kristensen, Johan; Overgaard, Caroline.
In: Nordic Journal of Commercial Law, Vol. 2020, No. 2, 28.08.2020, p. 2-17.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Disclosure of Third-Party Funding in Commercial Arbitration
AU - Tufte-Kristensen, Johan
AU - Overgaard, Caroline
PY - 2020/8/28
Y1 - 2020/8/28
N2 - An increasing number of arbitral proceedings involve sophisticated funding arrangements. Such arrangements may promote access to arbitration and entail a number of other advantages, but when they remain unknown to the arbitrators and the funded party’s opponents, they may give rise to a series of practical issues concerning, inter alia, costs and conflicts of interest. When a party has raised funding from a third-party funder, the arbitrators and opponents need to know about it. A series of practitioners and academics have contributed to the general field of third-party funding in arbitration. They have examined the prevalence of the phenomenon and identified the issues associated with it. However, only few have provided practical and operational solutions to these issues. The article explains how to solve the issues by way of disclosure. It examines the conse-quences of compelling a funded party to disclose its funding arrangements, and it examines how to adopt and construct a duty of disclosure in the most feasible manner. The article thereby con-tributes to the development of legal and institutional tools to tackle the issues associated with third-party funding in arbitration.
AB - An increasing number of arbitral proceedings involve sophisticated funding arrangements. Such arrangements may promote access to arbitration and entail a number of other advantages, but when they remain unknown to the arbitrators and the funded party’s opponents, they may give rise to a series of practical issues concerning, inter alia, costs and conflicts of interest. When a party has raised funding from a third-party funder, the arbitrators and opponents need to know about it. A series of practitioners and academics have contributed to the general field of third-party funding in arbitration. They have examined the prevalence of the phenomenon and identified the issues associated with it. However, only few have provided practical and operational solutions to these issues. The article explains how to solve the issues by way of disclosure. It examines the conse-quences of compelling a funded party to disclose its funding arrangements, and it examines how to adopt and construct a duty of disclosure in the most feasible manner. The article thereby con-tributes to the development of legal and institutional tools to tackle the issues associated with third-party funding in arbitration.
KW - Faculty of Law
KW - arbitration
KW - arbitrator
KW - Third-party funding
KW - Conflict of Interest
KW - security for costs
KW - Disclosure
KW - Third-party funding
KW - Arbitration funding
KW - Disclosure
KW - Arbitration
U2 - 10.5278/ojs.njcl.vi2.6099
DO - 10.5278/ojs.njcl.vi2.6099
M3 - Journal article
VL - 2020
SP - 2
EP - 17
JO - Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
JF - Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
SN - 1459-9686
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 203604219