Atlanta Arbitration Center Enlists International Pros To Raise Profile Overseas

The effort to make Atlanta a hot spot for international commercial arbitration is gaining some momentum.

The Atlanta Center for International Arbitration and Mediation, which launched two years ago, has assembled an arbitrators' council with top European arbitrators including a former U.S. ambassador, Charles Adams, and a leader of the ICC Court of Arbitration in Paris, Wendy Miles QC to promote its reputation as an arbitral venue abroad.

"It's all part of our effort to build our brand and be better known by people who are actual users of arbitration services," said Shelby Grubbs, the center's executive director.

The center opened its doors in September 2015 in state-of-the-art digs at Georgia State University's new law school building as a partnership between GSU Law and the Atlanta International Arbitration Society, known as AtlAS. It offers hearing space for commercial arbitrations and serves as a think tank for the local international arbitration community.

During the current fiscal year ending July 1, the center has hosted 35 hearings about one-third international and the rest domestic, Grubbs said. (Of those, 60 percent were arbitrations and 40 percent were mediations.) That was up from 12 hearings for the center's first year.

"So things are going in the right direction," Grubbs said. "I'm not dissatisfied."

Grubbs said it can take 25 years or more for a city to become a global arbitral center, citing the experience of Hong Kong and Singapore. "That always shocks people to hear," he said.

London and Paris are the biggest cities for international arbitration, hosting the London Court of International Arbitration and, in Paris, the International Chamber of Commerce's Court of Arbitration. Atlanta is also competing with plenty of other up-and-comers, such as Miami.

The best way for a city to land international arbitration hearings is to be specified as the seat in a cross-border business contract's arbitration clause. But even so, Grubbs said, of 1,000 contracts, 50 might have disputes. Of those, 15 might actually go to arbitration and, of those, perhaps three might end up in a hearing.

He added that his sense is that the Atlanta center is getting cases from the lawyers or even the arbitrators. "They can have a good bit of influence over where it's located, so that is part of the Arbitrators' Council effort to say they want it in Atlanta," Grubbs said. (The law governing any disputes is also specified in arbitration clauses and can be different from that of the country designated as the hearing location.)