About the University 

Established in 2001, University School of Law and Legal Studies, Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University is located in Dwarka, New Delhi, India. It is the first University to be in the vicinity of the Supreme Court, Delhi High Court, various subordinate courts, commissions, tribunals and various monitoring offices of national and international voluntary organizations.

About the Blog

The USLLS ADR Blog is an initiative of the University School of Law of Legal Studies, Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University. The team at USLLS ADR Blog believes that sustained academic deliberation is required to ensure that the field of Alternative Dispute Resolution Law grows continuously, and becomes the mainstream solution to disputes.

The objective of this blog is to provide a conducive platform that fosters discussions and deliberations pertaining to the field of ADR by academicians, researchers, law students and legal practitioners.

The Advisory Board of the Blog consists of extremely accomplished individuals in the field of ADR so as to enable the Blog to ensure that the viewpoints of the various stakeholders are addressed through the holistic functioning of the Blog.

Board of Advisors

The members of the Board of Advisors are: Mr. Ratan K. Singh (Senior Advocate and Arbitrator), Mr. Shashank Garg (Independent Counsel and Arbitrator), Mr. Divyakant Lahoti (Advocate-on-Record and Arbitrator), Mr. Thomas P. Valenti (Attorney and Conflict Resolution Specialist), Ms. Veena Ralli (Mediator and Organising Secretary, Samadhan – Delhi High Court Mediation & Conciliation Centre), and Dr. Nidhi Gupta (Associate Professor, NLU Jodhpur).

Submission Guidelines

All submissions pertaining to the field of ADR, subject to the following guidelines are welcome:

  1. Co-authorship up to two authors is allowed. Refrain from mentioning the name, institutional affiliation, or any other detail of the author(s) in the document to facilitate the double-blind review process.
  2. Submissions should be original and unpublished work of the author(s). Any form of plagiarism will result in an automatic rejection. Moreover, if the Turnitin similarity index reports over 20% similarity (after making the relevant exclusions such as bibliography, quotes, small matches etc.), then the submission shall be rejected. 
  3. Submissions should be concise. They should range between 1000-2000 words. Longer posts may be published in parts subject to the editorial board’s discretion. The word limit is exclusive of endnotes.

General Formatting Guidelines

  1. Formatting Typescript
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Review Process

  • All submissions are put through a rigorous double-blind review process where they are evaluated by two editors on different parameters.
  • The review process usually concludes within 14 days from the date of receipt of the acknowledgement of the submission.
  • Once the review is complete, the decision of acceptance (conditional or unconditional) or rejection is communicated to the author.
  • The authors will be provided 10 days to make the necessary changes that may be suggested by the editorial board. It is expected that the authors will make all changes in good faith. 

Upon acceptance of the manuscript for publication by the editorial board, the copyright over the manuscript shall vest in the Blog. However, the moral rights over the manuscript shall vest in the author(s).

The Blog only accepts exclusive publications. Once a manuscript is accepted, the same can not be published elsewhere. 

Submission Procedure

  • Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis.
  • All submissions must be made to: submissions@usllsadrblog.com
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  • An abstract of not more than 100 words must accompany the submission. The abstract is exclusive of the word limit for the article.
  • The author(s) are also requested to submit a short biography detailing their current designation and institutional affiliations. 

Contact details

Mail at: operations@usllsadrblog.com or to submissions@usllsadrblog.com

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Introduction

The utilization of third-party funding in international commercial arbitration is one of the most intensely discussed subjects in the field. Third-party funding is a technique wherein a third-party funder pays for one of the gatherings’ arbitration costs to some degree or in full. In case of a positive honor, the third-party funder is typically paid a piece of the honor sum that was recently settled upon. The funder’s cash is lost assuming the honor is negative. Referee irreconcilable situation inferable from nondisclosure of the third-party funder’s commitment in the process is one of the numerous troubles created by the presence of third-party funders in international commercial arbitration procedures.1

International commercial arbitration is a technique for resolving disputes that emerge from international agreements. It is utilized as a substitute for litigation and is administered generally by the getting parties’ earlier arrangements, instead of by public regulation or procedural guidelines. Most agreements incorporate a debate resolution condition that expresses that any agreement-related issues will be settled by arbitration instead of litigation. At the hour of the agreement, the parties could characterize the discussion, procedural techniques, and controlling regulation.

International arbitration is a gathering who meets up to tackle an issue. Everything begins with a private arrangement between the two parties. It continues through private procedures in which the party’s desires play representative importance. In any case, it closes with an honor that has lawful weight and impact and that, under the right conditions, most nations’ courts will perceive and implement. To put it plainly, this previously private technique currently makes a public difference, because of the help of each state’s public power and as revered in that state’s public regulation. The connection between public regulation and international arrangements and shows is pivotal for international arbitration to work successfully.2

Types of Arbitration

Arbitration might be “institutional” or “ad hoc” in nature. The sort of arbitration will be determined by the contract’s conditions.

Institutional Arbitration
Institutional arbitration is one that is administered by a specialist arbitral organization and directed by its own arrangement of rules. There are various comparable associations, some of which are more deeply grounded than others. The ICC, ICSID, the LCIA, and the International Center for Dispute Resolution are among the most notable (ICDR). There are other provincial arbitral foundations (for instance, in Beijing and Cairo), as well also known offices of exchange, like those in Stockholm, Switzerland, and Vienna.

The principles of these arbitral associations depend on a premise that is extensively practically identical. Some rulebooks depend on common regulation discoveries, while others depend on customary regulation revelations. All arrangements of rules share one thing for all intents and purposes: they’re composed explicitly for arbitrations that will be checked by the important establishment, and they’re as often as possible fused into the fundamental agreement between the parties that incorporates an arbitration provision.

Ad-hoc Arbitration
Ad hoc arbitrations are run autonomously by the parties, who are answerable for settling on the scene, the number of authorities, the type of arbitration, and any remaining parts of the procedures. As an issue of decision, and all the more normally, the parties might concur that the arbitration will be led without the association of an arbitral organization, but instead as per a deep-rooted set of rules, for example, those laid out by UNCITRAL, which give a sane system inside which the council and the parties might add any comprehensive arrangements as they see fit, for example, rules requiring the accommodation of pre-preliminary briefs or the understanding of master reports.3

Laws used in International Arbitration

International treaties and national laws, both procedural and substantive, as well as the procedural norms of the relevant arbitral organization, are totally utilized in arbitration. The Geneva Protocol of 1923 and the Geneva Convention of 1927 managed the understanding and requirement of international arbitration arrangements, as well as the authorization of unfamiliar arbitral decisions. The Bustamante Code of 1928 and the European Convention of 1961 were then trailed by a few local arrangements until the main show in the field of international commercial arbitration, the New York Convention, was pronounced in 1958.

The Geneva Treaties were trailed by the New York Convention. The expression “Show on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards” is a misnomer. The acknowledgment and implementation of arbitration arrangements is, actually, the Convention’s beginning stage. It accommodates the overall implementation of grants that meet the specified circumstances, as well as the affirmation of the legitimateness and enforceability of arbitration arrangements.

A brief notice of BITs should be made with regards to international treaties and shows. States that worked with one another in the past regularly marked ‘treaties of kinship, business, and route.’ To energize exchange and speculation, the nations included would offer each other alluring exchanging conditions and consent to resolve any disputes through arbitration. Respective venture treaties, or BITs as they are all the more for the most part known, have to a great extent supplanted such treaties.

A proposition to change the New York Convention started the production of the model regulation. This brought about the UNCITRAL report expressing that a model or uniform legislation would be more viable in orchestrating the arbitration laws of various nations all over the planet. The last phrasing of the Model Law was acknowledged by UNCITRAL as a regulation to oversee international commercial arbitration during its meeting in Vienna in June 1985. In December 1985, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution underwriting the Model Law and prescribing it to the Member States. The Model Law has demonstrated to be a colossal achievement. The text clears up the arbitral cycle from starting for end in a direct and straightforward way. Many states have taken on it as their arbitration legislation, either completely or with minor adjustments.

International arbitration necessitates the consent of all parties. An agreement to arbitrate, which is normally concluded ‘in writing and signed by the parties, demonstrates such permission. Third parties to an arbitration agreement have been found to be bound by the agreement in a variety of circumstances, including:

  1. By virtue of the ‘group of companies’ theory, which allows the benefits and obligations deriving from an arbitration agreement to be extended to other members of the same group of companies under certain circumstances.
  2. General rules of private law, particularly those governing assignment, agency, and succession, are in effect.

The English Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 states that a third party may enforce a contractual provision if the contract specifically allows it or if the contract purports to benefit the third party. When a contract includes an arbitration clause, the third party is obligated by the clause and must follow the arbitration procedure.4

International Arbitration in India

In India, International Commercial Arbitration is defined by Section 2 (1) (f) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996 as “an arbitration dealing with disputes arising out of legal connections, whether contractual or not, treated as commercial law in effect in India and where at least one party is:

  • A person who is a citizen of, or has a habitual residence in, a country other than India.
  • A company that is incorporated in a country other than India.
  • Any firm, organization, or group of individuals whose central management and control are exercised outside of India.
  • A foreign country’s government

Both the courts and the government have taken a supportive of arbitration position. “The Government of India is effectively supporting International Arbitration as a fair and legal system of resolving International Business Disputes,” as indicated by the arrangement. A survey of ongoing Supreme Court of India cases uncovers that courts presently seldom intercede in the arbitration cycle, permitting councils to manage the issues brought up in the case. The “fundamental rule that should help court administering attempting to make is that Arbitration is basically a consensual ramification of a commitment by contracting parties to settle their disparities through a private council” and that “the obligation of the court is to bestow to that commercial understanding a feeling of business viability,” as indicated by the new translation.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in maintaining the courts’ negligible cooperation in arbitral procedures, likewise expressed that courts ought to remember that the pattern is to keep away from obstruction with the arbitration interaction since it is the favored gathering. That is additionally the approach that the 1996 Act uncovers. Courts should utilize uncommon mindfulness and even hesitance in impeding arbitration processes. While Indian courts might have the jurisdiction to end arbitration procedures, they should do so sparingly and just based on contemplations like those expressed in sections 8 and 45 of the 1996 Act, all things considered.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in maintaining the courts’ negligible cooperation in arbitral procedures, likewise expressed that courts ought to remember that the pattern is to keep away from obstruction with the arbitration interaction since it is the favored gathering. That is additionally the approach that the 1996 Act uncovers. Courts should utilize uncommon mindfulness and even hesitance in impeding arbitration processes. While Indian courts might have the jurisdiction to end arbitration procedures, they should do so sparingly and just based on contemplations like those expressed in sections 8 and 45 of the 1996 Act, all things considered.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India’s arbitration approach was additionally reflected in a new judgment, which held that “the Court shouldn’t settle on the benefits of whether the debate connects with excepted matters under the arrangement being referred to or not while managing an application under Section 11(6) of the Act.” In Indus Mobile Distribution Private Ltd versus Datawind Innovations Private Limited and Ors, the Hon’ble Supreme Court maintained the restrictiveness of arbitration, taking note of that “the second the seat is picked, it is comparable to an elite jurisdiction arrangement.”

International Commercial Arbitration is divided into two categories in India:

  • India-based International Commercial Arbitration (Part 1 of the Act)
  • International Commercial Arbitration has a seat in a country other than India (Part 2 of the Act)

In a progression of decisions, the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India explained and smoothed out the law of arbitration, holding that Indian courts have no association by any means in issues of unfamiliar situated arbitrations, and that main Part 2 will apply in such cases.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court of India’s choice in BALCO, which overruled the prior Bhatia International versus Bulk Trading judgment, has accordingly moved Indian arbitration regulation in a legitimate way.

The Bombay High Court and the Calcutta High Court have affirmed that Part 1 of the Act won’t make a difference in unfamiliar situated arbitrations, continuing in the strides of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India. It is actually quite significant that the Hon’ble Supreme Court and the Hon’ble High Court have over and again underscored the worth of arbitration.5

The Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act 2015, which was enacted in 2015, considerably expanded the scope of arbitration in India, as follows:

a) The provisions apply to international commercial arbitrations as well, even if the arbitration takes place outside of India.
b) Unless there is a valid arbitration agreement, the courts must submit the parties to the arbitration.
c) If a court issues an interim order before the start of arbitral proceedings, the procedures must begin within 90 days of the order or such other time as the court specifies;
d) Courts will only accept an application if they believe they will be able to provide a remedy;
e) Include rewards that are in violation of India Law’s fundamental policy or ideas of morality and fairness;
f) The court’s role is limited to determining whether or not an arbitration agreement is valid.
g) The arbitral tribunal must issue its decision within 12 months, with a 6-month extension option. If awards are not rendered within 6 months, the arbitral tribunal will receive additional fees, and the arbitrator’s remuneration will be reduced by up to 5% for each month over the prescribed time.
h) Awards made in court must be resolved within one year; parties might choose to undergo arbitration proceedings in a more expedited way.

Third-Party Funding

Funding activity has expanded drastically lately, at first zeroing in on financial backer state arbitration yet progressively moving to commercial international arbitration. Not at all like in public litigation, which was not set in stone by court-named judges, the utilization of third-party funding in private arbitration with party-named authorities has raised various moral and procedural worries. Third-party funding (TPF) has turned into a disagreeable issue in international arbitration and has started different worries.

Third-party funding is an understanding where a third party gives monetary help to a party in return for a portion of the inevitable financial honor. By and large, the cash will pay the subsidized party’s lawful charges and arbitration consumptions. On the off chance that the supported party is requested to pay the adversary’s expenses, the funder may consent to do so and offer security for the rival’s expenses.

The assortment and complexity of funding items and constructions offered have developed as the business has developed. There is no such thing as a one-size-fits-all arrangement, and the funding depicted above is at its generally fundamental level. Third-party gathering pledges, otherwise called “litigation finance,” has created after some time. Litigation finance is being utilized for a bigger scope of purposes than just funding one-off claims, with the returns of the litigation or arbitration being utilized as insurance. Portfolio funding, in which lenders give a funding bundle that covers an arrangement of cases, is another new pattern. Albeit third-party funding enjoys a ton of benefits – growing admittance to equity being one of them – it likewise accompanies a ton of risks and snags, like irreconcilable circumstances, exposure, and (security for) costs. The new ascent of third-party funding in international arbitration, as well as persistent disputes regarding the matter, have brought about massive changes in its guideline, both on a public and international level.

The utilization of third-party funding in international commercial arbitration is one of the most fervently discussed subjects in the field. Assuming you’re needing to support an oddball case, use the accompanying agenda as a beginning stage: “Funders are reluctant to support claims that do exclude financial harms.” Because funders are paid in light of how much cash is recuperated, claims having a damaging result are specifically noteworthy to them. Subsequently, support is generally restricted to petitioners or respondents who have a counterclaim.

Funders will need to see that you have a decent possibility of succeeding. They will lead their own free examination concerning the case and will possibly finance it assuming that they are certain about it and the manner in which it is being introduced. Funders will need to know whether the objective (i.e., the respondent) will actually want to cover the case, charges, and interest. What is its installment record corresponding to arbitration grants, especially assuming it is a state? The funder will likewise need to know where the resources are found; the gamble of requirement is a significant concern. A few benefactors might be put off by the way that they are situated in locales where authorization is troublesome. Different variables, for example, whether the objective will battle as far as possible, may likewise affect the funder.

The arbitration’s seat is critical since it decides if funding is allowable under nearby regulations. The area of requirement will be pivotal, as supporting might be used to disclose strategy contentions to ruin authorization.” Funders will need to see that you have a decent possibility of succeeding. They will lead their own free examination concerning the case and will possibly subsidize it on the off chance that they are sure about it and the manner in which it is being introduced. Funders will need to know whether the objective (i.e., the respondent) will actually want to cover the case, charges, and interest. What is its installment record corresponding to arbitration grants, especially in the event that it is a state? The funder will likewise need to know where the resources are found; the gamble of authorization is a significant concern. A few benefactors might be put off by the way that they are situated inwards where implementation is troublesome. Different elements, for example, whether the objective will battle as far as possible, may likewise affect the funder.

In international arbitration, there are primarily two reasons why parties seek third-party funding. They are as follows:

  1. Third-party funding allows a claimant to pursue a claim that they would not have been able to pursue otherwise, facilitating access to justice.
  2. Another key advantage of third-party funding in international arbitration is that it allows the claimant to share the financial risk and operational cost of pursuing his claim with the commercial funder.

In India, especially in the states like Maharashtra, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh, the notion of third-party funding is legally recognized in civil cases under the Civil Code of Procedure. The Civil Procedure Code of 1908, which governs civil court procedures in India, can be used to prove this agreement to third-party funding. XXV Order The first rule of the code (as amended by Maharashtra, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh). The courts have the authority to secure lawsuit costs by asking the financier to join as a party and depositing the fees in court.

Bombay High Court Notification P 0102/77, dated September 5, 1983, revised Order XXV of the Civil Procedure Code for Maharashtra. It goes like this: “3. (1) If any plaintiff has transferred or agreed to transfer any share or interest in the suit’s property to a person who is not already a party to the suit for the purpose of being financed in the suit, the Court may order such person to be made a plaintiff to the suit if he consents, and may order such person, either on its own motion or on the application of any defendant, to give security for the payment of all costs incurred. If such security is not provided within the time specified, the Court may issue an order dismissing the suit as to his right to or interest in the property in suit, or declaring him banned from claiming any right to or interest in the property in the suit in the future.….”

Third-party funding is not mentioned in the 1996 Arbitration and Conciliation Act. The presence of third-party funding clauses in particular state revised Civil Procedure Codes does not imply that a comparable clause in arbitrations is also legal. As a result, any third-party funding agreement would have to be a legally binding contract under the Indian Contract Act of 1872.

The logistics of getting third-party funds into and out of India provide their own set of problems. The Foreign Exchange Management Act of 1999 (‘FEMA’) and its associated rules and regulations govern this procedure. All transactions involving foreign exchange and/or non-residents are divided into two categories by FEMA: current account and capital account transactions. It’s unclear how third-party funding would interact with the regulatory environment because FEMA doesn’t clearly designate it as either a current or capital account transaction.6

Third-Party Funding in International Arbitration: Concerns

Concerns about third-party funding in international arbitration have been highlighted as follows:

  • The premise that a third-party funder pays for a party’s legal bills may have an impact on arbitrators’ independence. A third-party funder with whom one of the arbitrators has a conflict of interest may fund a party. For example, the arbiter in the first arbitration where one of the parties is sponsored by a funder could be the claimant’s counsel in a subsequent arbitration where the claim is funded by the same funder. This compromises the arbitrator’s independence and impartiality and may have a direct impact on the arbitral tribunal’s legality, making the award vulnerable to appeal.
  • The fact that a claimant receives third-party money could indicate that the claimant is impoverished and so unable to pay an adverse cost award. The successful party is frequently allowed to recover reasonable costs from the losing party through tribunals. The number of costs awarded to the successful party can be extremely large given the duration and complexity of international arbitration proceedings.
  • The presence of third-party money is likely to create a situation in which the self-funded party suspects that the party acquiring funding is financially strapped and will be unable to pay any adverse cost award. Because the third-party funder is not a signatory to the arbitration agreement or a party to the arbitration proceedings, the arbitral panel lacks the authority to order the funder to pay adverse costs. To avoid a situation where the impecunious award debtor may not be able to pay, the self-funded party may seek security for expenses.

Regulations for Third-Party Funding

Regardless, domestic norms and procedures are probably going to contrast between jurisdictions, taking into consideration misuse “Discussion shopping happens when parties pick an ideal or even non-existent overseeing resolution. Second, there is a gamble of “over-guideline,” which would actually restrict the utilization and use of third-party cash past what is required. Third, it’s almost difficult to resolve all issues and worries with a solitary arrangement of clear and restricting standards; third-party funding issues, for instance, are intricate “contrast from one case to another, starting with one jurisdiction then onto the next, and will without a doubt advance after some time, as will the manner in which third-party funding is utilized and seen.

There is no such thing as a “one-size-fits-all” solution, and adaptability is crucial. This leaves us with the capacities that arbitral organizations and international principles can play in this climate, which we accept are more powerful. Institutional arbitration rules are all the more especially expected for the arbitral methodology and have more noteworthy appropriateness than domestic regulation. As a rule, international guidelines are non-restricting and give more scope. The International Bar Association Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest, distributed in 2014, were quick to address third-party funding to give guidance to specialists, and they were not without progress.

Maintenance & Champerty

Maintenance is the funding or arrangement of monetary assistance to a case holder that permits the case to be legitimately sought after in spite of the way that the funder or provider of monetary help has no relationship to or substantial interest in the case. Champerty goes above and beyond by expressing that the funder or monetary source has a direct monetary stake in the case’s result. The cash is given in return for a level of harm on the off chance that the case is fruitful. The accompanying remarks best reflect why these ways of behaving were judged ethically and morally against the public approach, bringing about their being made crooks.

The thoughts of “maintenance” and “champerty” host generally blocked third get-togethers from supporting litigation in precedent-based regulation jurisdictions. The reasoning behind this was to keep third parties from profiting from litigation in which they had no certified stake, as this could prompt negligible or vexatious litigation. Nonetheless, jurisdictions have adopted a more logical strategy for third-party funding to elevate admittance to equity.

Maintenance and champerty are as yet thought about misdeeds and violations in certain jurisdictions, like Ireland. On the grounds of champerty, the Irish Supreme Court barred a third-party benefactor from supporting significant litigation against the Irish government in May 2017. Be that as it may, mentalities on third-party funding are moving in Asia. Hong Kong and Singapore have both passed regulations permitting and directing its utilization in international arbitration.7

Emerging Issues

Third-Party Funding has been consumed by an assortment of difficulties in its new long stretches of improvement. The “prohibitive nature of relevant regulations (counting the meaning of ‘party’ and ‘expenses’) and the seldom practiced jurisdictional powers of courts over third parties (with the exception of customary standards of organization and task) bring about a deficiency of arbitral practice versus third-party funders” right now. While most of the appropriate regulations say that the honor is restricting just between parties, the English Arbitration Act 1996 incorporates “people asserting under or through them” in the meaning of “party.” This could be interpreted to imply that funders are incorporated. Courts, then again, have given a prohibitive development of the expression “party” to just incorporate parties under office and subrogation tenets.

Except if an arbitral practice or appropriate legislative changes to unequivocally remember funders for costs orders, this power will remain essentially dependent upon tact and use of third-party standards, saving the broad support of arbitration, specifically, party assent. While the starting points of consensual struggle settlement should be thought of, the arbitral system offers a more extensive reach to remember third-party agents for explicit cases to accomplish the motivations behind equity and value.

Conclusion

Third-party funding is a quickly rising business that will presumably assume a critical part in international commercial arbitration in the future as a standard supporting system for international arbitration cases. While the market is as yet minuscule as far as suppliers and cash, applicable assets are accessible for arbitrations, and they are at present being put resources into cases that are decided to be solid and have great recoverability possibilities. TPF will ostensibly assume a much greater part in venture arbitration because of the demand for receptiveness in the field. TPF is a fabulous way to deal with delegating the monetary dangers related to arbitral procedures. TPF, then again, involves handing over a capacity to the funder.

The major issue with TPF arrangements is that they are separated from the fundamental struggles, both regarding pertinent legislation and council jurisdiction. This likewise makes sense of why councils have been reluctant to survey whether a funding plan has any bearing on the topic of cost portion. In spite of the absence of a general obligation to uncover TPF arrangements, the need to protect mediators’ fair-mindedness and freedom, which is broadly viewed as a center precept of arbitral strategy, may require exposure.

TPF would assist India with accomplishing public arrangement objectives by upgrading admittance to equity, giving equipped portrayal, and further developing cases for the executives, in addition to other things. Nonetheless, agents have been not able to enter the Indian market because of an absence of an official system and exact legitimate clearness. Considering ongoing regulative changes in Singapore and Hong Kong, it is the previous time for India to exploit its well-established dismissal of champerty and maintenance to contend successfully in the international arbitration landscape by securing itself as a middle for international commercial arbitration. Accordingly, it will be interesting to see the Hyderabad High Court’s possible decision on third-party finance courses of action.

Third-party finance can possibly assume a critical part in international commercial and speculation arbitrations. Despite the fact that there has been a lot of conversation about this theme in scholastic circles, great endeavors taken by nations all over the planet to follow up regarding the matter might hurry the reception of third-party funding. Permitting such contribution in elective compromise techniques would prepare for third-party funding in customary question resolution components like litigation. Therefore, the second has come for India to unambiguously make the way for third-party finance, a move that will without a doubt help its populace as well as India’s international standing.

References:

  1. https://www.latestlaws.com/articles/third-party-funding-in-international-commercial-arbitration-indian-and-international-perspective-by-harleen-kaur/#_ftn1
  2. https://www.international-arbitration-attorney.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Thibault-De-Boulle-Thesis-On-Third-Party-Funding.pdf
  3. https://kluwerlawonline.com/journalarticle/Journal+of+International+Arbitration/32.3/JOIA2015013
  4. https://www.ashurst.com/en/news-and-insights/legal-updates/quickguide—third-party-funding-in-international-arbitration/
  5. https://www.thestatesman.com/india/arbitration-law-in-india-everything-you-want-to-know-1502757528.html
  6. https://viamediationcentre.org/readnews/NTUy/Arbitration-law-in-India-Everything-you-want-to-know#:~:text=It%20is%20a%20legal%20technique,they%20agree%20to%20be%20bound.&text=The%20Indian%20law%20with%20respect,on%20the%20English%20Common%20Law.
  7. https://deliverypdf.ssrn.com/delivery.php?ID=800100124064064089092085007074099081036046034042033020101002096072120066106095106095110003010016007048098011020092029022127014118055068037012100089121120083098112077091053022067069081079107124066095066066094068088120088108022099074006068087105079026001&EXT=pdf&INDEX=TRUE

This article is written by Arryan Mohanty, a 2nd Year Student student of Symbiosis Law School.

About VM Legal

The firm is committed to providing practical legal solutions to its clients. The firm handles a diverse range of cases including commercial disputes, banking, real estate, intellectual property and some criminal matters.

About the Job Opportunity

The Associate will be required to primarily work in commercial and civil litigation and arbitration. Main duties include drafting notices, petitions, applications and all pleadings to be filed before the Hon’ble High Court, Bombay, and other lower courts. Will be required to appear before the Hon’ble High Court, City Civil Courts, NCLT, and various other forums such as FDA and MSME. Opportunity to directly interact with several counsels and clients. 

Eligibility

  • LL.B. Degree
  • Enrolled with the Bar Council of Maharashtra & Goa
  • PQE: 2 years 
  • Only candidates from/currently based in Mumbai will be entertained 

Number of Positions

1 (One)

Location

Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Salary

Based on experience

How to Apply?

Email Resume with a covering email of not more than 250 words to simran.kasat@vmlegal.in

Contact Information

E-mail ID: simran.kasat@vmlegal.in

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About Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HP)

The Hewlett Packard (HP) Enterprise Company is an American multinational enterprise information technology company based in Texas, United States, which works in servers, storage, networking, containerization software and consulting and support.

About the Job Role

The legal counsel to HPE is expected to apply legal knowledge to complex business transactions and work in areas such as Intellectual Property, Mergers and Acquisitions, Ethics, Antitrust, Commercial Law, and Litigation to name but a few.

Roles and Responsibilities

  • The legal counsel to HP is expected to:
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    • Identifies legal risk and recommends solutions that help address the client’s objectives,
    • Represents company in transactions, interactions, or disputes with customers, suppliers, partners, and competitors
    • Balances the business interests of client groups with ultimate fiduciary responsibility to company
    • Represents the company before industry policy setting organizations, government agencies, and other regulatory bodies
    • Areas of law practiced may include intellectual property law, mergers and acquisitions, corporate securities law, litigation, employment, structured financial deals, US government contracting, outsourcing, environmental, employee benefits and bankruptcy.
    • Manages the development of legal strategies by providing specialized legal expertise in one or more areas of strategic importance or having significant impact on revenue, risk, and policy for client base.
    • Plans and facilitates training and mentoring sessions with other team members and clients to share expertise on a variety of subtopics related to a specific legal concentration.
    • Identifies and resolves highly complex legal, regulatory, and business issues requiring highly specialized knowledge and judgment.
    • Acts as a master of the area of specialization by networking effectively to share subject matter expertise across a broad cross-section of the organization, etc.

Eligibility & Experience

  • Educational Qualifications:
    • Advanced university degree in law (e.g. JD or LLB); additional advanced degree relevant to the specialty preferred,
    • Meets local legal license requirements.
  • Experience:
    • Typically 2-4 years of commercial legal experience at a law firm or in-house.
    • Significant experience managing multiple, complex, strategic, specialty law projects, issues, and transactions.
  • Required Skills
    • Mastery of practical and academic knowledge within a specific legal concentration, and a recognized authority in one or more sub-areas within the specific legal concentration,
    • Deep knowledge of company policies, procedures, and practices relevant to the specialty,
    • Developed understanding of how to operate successfully in the international legal environment for the specific legal concentration,
    • Mastery in negotiating or advising senior representatives of external and internal organizations on complex and high value/risk matters in a specialty,
    • Excellent presentation, facilitation, and networking skills,
    • English language skills to business standard required.

Location

Bangalore (now, Bengaluru), Karnataka

Link to apply

https://careers.hpe.com/job/Hewlett-Packard-Enterprise-Bangalore-Karnataka/166395218?source=APPLICANT_SOURCE_JOB_BOARD_LINKEDIN

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About NABARD

National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) is an apex regulatory body for the overall regulation of regional rural banks and apex cooperative banks in India. It is under the jurisdiction of Ministry of Finance, Government of India. 

About the Opportunity

NABARD is inviting applications from talented and motivated students for its Student Internship 2022-23 to fill up 40 seats for the same.

The objective of the Scheme is to assign short-term tasks/projects/studies useful and relevant to NABARD, to students pursuing a post-graduate degree (completing/completed the first year) in Agriculture and allied disciplines, Agri-business, Economics, Social Sciences, and Management, as well as Law.

The scheme is expected to provide valuable feedback with a fresh perspective through studies/projects undertaken by the students on themes of interest to NABARD.

Number of Vacancies

40 (35 seats for Regional Offices/TEs & 05 seats for Head Office)

Please refer to the official notification for the detailed breakup of seats.

Mode of Internship

Physical; At NABARD’s offices

Roles and Responsibilities of the Intern

The broad objective is to assess/gauge the impact of various NABARD interventions at the ground level.

The SIS 2022-23 scheme will also serve as an exercise for documentation of success stories of NABARD’s projects/programs/schemes/activities at the field level.

Responsibilities: To study one of the following three NABARD interventions only:

a) Farmers Producer Organisations/Farmer Collectives
b) Rural Community Institutions: SHGs/JLGs or
c) Watershed Development Programmes

The study sample may cover mixed units/respondents (with and without NABARD’s support/interventions) to make a comparative assessment and qualitative feedback.

Eligibility Criteria (Educational Background, Skills and Abilities Required, etc)

  • Students pursuing a post-graduate degree (having completed/completing 1st year) in
    • Agriculture and allied disciplines (Veterinary, Fisheries, etc.),
    • Agri-business,
    • Economics,
    • Social Sciences and Management from Institutes/ Universities of repute OR
    • Students pursuing 5 years of integrated courses including Law completing/completed 4th year of their course
  • Students applying for internships in a particular state must be either pursuing their degree from that State or they must belong to that State (ordinarily resident of the State).
  • For seats allocated to Head Office, Mumbai students pursuing education from Mumbai would be preferred. However, seats in Head Office, Mumbai are open to applications from students across the country.

Stipend (If any)

  • Stipend/month (Minimum 8 weeks (2 Months) to maximum 12 Weeks (3 months): Rs. 18,000 per month
  • Field visit allowance (including of all expenditure)-maximum for 30 days:
    • Rs. 2,000 per day (For 8 North-East Region States (NER))
    • 1500 per day (Excluding 8 NER States)
  • Travel allowance for field visits from HQ to Field and back to HQ. On reimbursement basis subject to submission of valid tickets /other proofs (like petrol/taxi receipts): Rs. 6,000 per head (maximum)
  • Miscellaneous expenses on declaration basis: Rs. 2,000 per head

Application Deadline

March 31, 2022

Contact Information

For any queries/clarifications please reach out to NABARD via email to sis.dear@nabard.org or

Contact at: 022-2653953

Link for more details

https://www.nabard.org/auth/writereaddata/WhatsNew/1003224318notification-for-nabard-student-internship-scheme2022-23.pdf

Link to apply

https://www.nabard.org/studentinternship/register.aspx

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About Dream Legal

DreamLegal gives a platform to everyone interested in legal writing by publishing their literature through an easy process. The team also has a page solely dedicated to guiding budding lawyers. The law aspirants can take up many sectional tests and could directly interact with the law students from the topmost law colleges of the country.

DreamLegal is also a platform providing weekly articles on various socio-legal notions. They also post regular opportunities for everyone in the legal field.

About the Internship 

  • Mode: Online
  • Duration: 1 Month
  • Joining: Immediate

Nature of Work

  1. Research: Assist the project leader in conducting research, compiling data, and implementing ideas.
  2. Outreach: Assist the outreach manager in the marketing and communication activities of the organization.
  3. Social Media: Assist the social media manager in handling DreamLegal’s social media handles and monitor platforms like Instagram, LinkedIn, Telegram, Youtube etc. Also, to brainstorm ideas for campaigns.
  4. Marketing: Assist marketing manager in market analysis and research on competition. Also, a marketing intern is expected to support the marketing team in the daily administration and collecting quantitative and qualitative data from marketing campaigns.
  5. Design: Assist the social media manager in creating clear, innovative, and visually engaging graphics for product illustration, website, and marketing.

Important Note

  • The candidate must have an excellent knowledge of computer systems and office-related software.
  • DreamLegal does not remunerate interns. There is no compensation, financial or otherwise for internship assignments. 

Eligibility

1st Year Law Students of a 5-year course enrolled in any BCI-approved college/institution.

Duration of Internship

  • At least 1 month (Can be extended at the discretion of the team and depending on the work quality).
  • Interns not completing the requisite period or work will not be issued any certificate.

How to Apply?

Interested students may apply directly by filling out the form through the link given at the end of this post. 

If selected, the candidate will be directly contacted by the manager.

Application Deadline

Applications must reach the latest by April 1, 2022 (11:59 PM).

Applications sent after the deadline will be considered for the next slot of the Internship.

Perks

  • After successfully serving as the intern for a specified time, the student shall be awarded a Certificate of Internship signed by the partners of the organization.
  • Opportunity to be a part of the content team at the partner’s discretion and work quality.
  • Stipend: Performance-based incentives

Contact Information

In case of any queries, DreamLegal can be reached at contact@dreamlegal.in

Link to apply

https://forms.gle/MSe8VbQdAVisuzxo8

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on LexPeeps is true to our knowledge. But still it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

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About NHRC

The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) of India is a Statutory public body constituted on 12 October 1993 under the Protection of Human Rights Ordinance of September 28, 1993. It was given a statutory basis by the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 (PHRA).

The NHRC is the National Human Rights Commission of India, responsible for the protection and promotion of human rights, defined by the Act as “Rights Relating To Life, liberty, equality and dignity of the individual guaranteed by the Constitution or embodied in the International Covenants and enforceable by courts in India.

The NHRC Internship Program

The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has expressly been mandated to promote Human Rights literacy and awareness vide Section 12 (h) of the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993.

With a view to spreading awareness among University students about the need for protection and promotion of Human Rights, the Commission has been regularly conducting Internship Programmes’ since 1998.

  • Program: Online Short Term Internship Programme (OSTI) April 2022
  • Duration: April 18, 2022 to May 02, 2022 (15 days).

Eligibility

Applications are invited from eligible students of the entire country. Eligibility and selection criteria will be as follows:-

  • Students studying in 3rd year and onwards of an integrated 5 year PG course
  • Students studying in 3rd/final year of graduation course
  • Students of any semester/year of any post-graduate degree course
  • Students of any semester/year of any post-graduate diploma course
  • Students who are research scholars in any stream

Students who have research potential in the areas relating to human rights will be preferred (to be indicated in the write-up).

Note: Students must have consistently attained a minimum of 60% marks in Class XII and all subsequent courses including the presently pursued courses. The calculated percentage has to be mentioned clearly from their CGPA/SGPA along with the formula for the percentage obtained. Failure to do either of it so would result in the rejection of the application form.

Stipend & Award

  • All the student interns successfully completing the internship would receive a stipend of Rs. 2000/- (Rupees Two Thousand only)
  • Certificate of participation will be awarded to the candidates on the basis of the following parameters:
    • Attendance, Punctuality, Discipline, Participation in online sessions is mandatory;
    • Project Presentation & Project Reports and Book Review have to be submitted timely.

How to Apply?

The last date for submission of the application is April 3, 2022 (11:59 PM).

The ‘Application Form’ for NHRC Online Short Term Internship Programme 2022 is available at the link ‘Online Short Term Internship’. Application is to be submitted online using the link Online Short Term Internship available at NHRC’s website. OR

Click on the link given at the end of this post to apply online.

The final list of selected interns will be displayed on the NHRC website.

Important Note: Incomplete applications/applications without self-attested copies of mark sheets, letters of recommendation & SOPs etc. will be rejected. Applications sent through e-mails/posts will not be entertained. No application will be accepted after the deadline i.e. April 3, 2022 (11:59 PM).

Documents Required

Applications without the following will be summarily rejected:

  • Statement of Purpose (SoP): A 250 words write-up on the topic ‘Statement of Purpose (SoP) for joining NHRC Online Short Term Internship’ will be required to be submitted by the applicants along with the application form online which will also serve as a basis of selection.
  • Marksheets: Enclose self-attested scanned copies of mark-sheet from 12th Standard and onwards and mark-sheet of each year/semester of presently pursuing course
  • Recommendation Letter: Scanned Recommendation letter/email by HOD/Dean/Principal concerned in the annexed Proforma.

Contact Information

For any details, you may please contact on the following contact numbers:

  • 011–24663283
  • 011-24663371

Timings: Between 10 AM to 6 PM on working days, i.e. Monday to Friday

Link for the official notification

https://nhrc.nic.in/sites/default/files/Advertisement%20-OSTI-april%202022.pdf

Link to apply

https://hrcnet.nic.in/training/candidate/Guidelines.aspx

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About the Chambers of Rauf Rahim

Advocate Rauf Rahim is an Advocate on Record (AOR) practicing at the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India.

About the Internship Opportunity

The Chambers of Advocate Rauf Rahim, Advocate on Record (AOR), Supreme Court of India is inviting applications for a physical internship at the office in Delhi.

Number of Interns Required

2 Interns

Mode of Internship

Physical Internship

Location: Chittaranjan Park, South Delhi

Eligibility

3rd, 4th , and 5th-year law students interested in litigation

Duration of Internship

4-6 weeks, starting immediately

Area of Work

Criminal Law, Service Law, Insurance and consumer protection, Trust matters, Civil law

Stipend (If Any)

Performance-based

Where to Apply?

Interested students must send their CV with a cover letter to mohsinrahim111@gmail.com

Application Deadline

March 30, 2022

Disclaimer: All information posted by us on LexPeeps is true to our knowledge. But still it is suggested that you check and confirm things on your level.

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About Lexpeeps Pvt. Ltd.

Lexpeeps Pvt. ltd. is an organization that works to assist and help law schools in organizing and managing their events. We’re seeking to provide young and dynamic law students with a platform to experience the legal world in their academic capacities. We organize different events where budding lawyers can experience the legal world. With a self-directed educational strategy and the guidance of industry experts, Lexpeeps also provide you with the recent happening in the legal world in the form of news, opportunities where you can find what suits you the best, articles to explore your interests, and many more.

Keeping practical exposure for the law students in mind:

Lexpeeps provides you with internships, where the legal experts and budding lawyers come in touch with each other and grow by associating with the company.
“Lexpeeps Pvt. Ltd. thrives on commitment and creativity”.

Eligibility:

  • The students currently pursuing their bachelor’s degree in law i.e., 3-Year LL.B. course or 5-Year LL.B. course from any recognized university/college in India.
  • Student pursuing their Post Graduation.
  • Have relevant skills and interests
  • Mode of Internship:
  • Online

Remuneration:

This is an unpaid opportunity.

How to apply?

Send your updated CV and a write-up to lexpeeps.in@gmail.com

Perks:

  • Internship Certificate on completion of the internship.
  • Best Research intern of the month award.
  • Discount on paid events organized by Lexpeeps Pvt. Ltd.
  • Publication on Lexpeeps blogs
  • Live session every Saturday/ Sunday for our interns to boost their legal researching skills. (Optional)

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About the Organizers

The Society for International Trade and Competition Law (‘SITC’) is an academic society of the West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences (‘WBNUJS’), Kolkata. Its aim is to increase awareness with respect to the two legal fields of competition and international trade law among law students and the public at large.

About the Blog Writing Competition

The blog teams of the NUJS Society for International Trade and Competition Law (SITC) and NUJS Intellectual Property and Technology Laws Society (IPTLS) are collaborating to organize a blog writing competition ‘CONFLUX’ wherein entries can be sent on the topic – ‘Intersection of IP and Competition Laws‘. 

Winning 5 entries will be published on both the IPTLS and SITC blogs. 

Concept Note

The two regimes of Competition and IP together work in a balance to safeguard market interests as well as promote innovation and thus through this collaboration both societies aim to promote discourse in this area.

Topics

  • Submissions must be on the interface of IP and competition laws. Some suggested broadheads are given below however authors are free to choose any topic of their choice.
    • Patent pools and competition
    • Licensing, FRAND terms, and competition
    • Competition aspects of royalties
    • Exhaustion of copyright and competition implications, etc.

Submission Guidelines

  • Word Limit: Not less than 1500 words
  • All submissions MUST provide in-text hyperlinks to the sources (available online) referred in the article.
  • In addition to such hyperlinks, endnotes MUST also be provided for all sources. These endnotes must be in the NUJS Law Review Format.
  • Co-authorship of up to two authors is allowed.
  • Articles should be divided into suitable headings to increase readability and navigation.

Formatting Guidelines

The submission must be in

  • Font: Times New Roman,
  • Alignment: Justified,
  • Font Size: Size 12,
  • Line Spacing: 1.5
  • Format: must be sent as a Word Document (version 2007 or beyond).

How to Submit?

  • Author details must NOT BE present in any form in the submitted word document.
  • Such details are to be provided ONLY in the body of the email, and should be as follows; Author’s Name, Uni/Institution/Firm/Place of Practice, Year of Study (if applicable), Contact email, and Contact no.
  • All submissions must ONLY be mailed to: submissions.conflux@gmail.com

Submission Deadline

Submit your entries by April 10, 2022.

Rewards

The Top 5 entries will be published on the IPTLS and SITC Blogs.

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