Charles (Chuck) Kotuby and Isha Jain will speak on a panel, “Are dissenting opinions in arbitration useful? How may dissenters contribute to move the law forward in international investment arbitration?” as part of Washington Arbitration Week.
The panel will take place in Washington, DC at the offices of Crowell & Moring LLP on Thursday 5 December from 10:30 am to 11:45 am EST. Charles and Isha will speak alongside Dr. Todd Weiler (Independent Arbitrator) and Mallory Silberman (Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown Law). The panel will be moderated by Ian A. Laird (Crowell & Moring LLP).
To register or find out more, please click here.
ABOUT CHARLES (CHUCK) KOTUBY
Chuck is Of Counsel based in the firm’s Washington, D.C. office. His practice focuses on international commercial and treaty-based arbitration, transnational litigation, and public international law. Previously a partner at an international law firm, he spent over twenty years as an international law counsel representing multinational corporations and sovereign states in complex international disputes.
Chuck is a Professor of Practice at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, an Honorary Professor at Durham Law School and a Visiting Professor of Law at the Kyiv School of Economics. He teaches courses in international arbitration, public international law and international human rights. He has published extensively, authoring or co-authoring more than two dozen articles and book chapters over the last 20 years.
ABOUT ISHA JAIN
Isha is a special legal consultant based in the Washington, DC office. She has experience in international commercial and investor-State arbitrations across a range of industries, including energy, construction, and intellectual property.
Isha holds an LLM from Harvard Law School, where she was awarded the Roger Fisher and Frank E.A. Sander Prize for the best student paper on a topic related to dispute resolution. She also holds an LLB from the National Law School of India University. In the 2018 Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot, she won the Stephen M. Schwebel award for best oralist in the world championship round.