Conference Date : 21-22 August 2026
Mode: Hybrid Mode
Organized By: University School of Law
Venue : Rayat Bahra University, Mohali, Punjab, India
Concept Note
The twenty first century has witnessed unprecedented transformations in the administration of justice owing to rapid technological advancements, globalization of commerce, and the increasing complexity of transnational legal relationships. International arbitration has emerged as one of the most preferred mechanisms for resolving cross-border commercial and investment disputes due to its neutrality, flexibility, confidentiality, and enforceability. Simultaneously, technological innovations including artificial intelligence, blockchain, online dispute resolution (ODR), smart contracts, predictive analytics, and digital evidence management are fundamentally reshaping the theory and practice of arbitration. These developments present immense opportunities for improving efficiency while simultaneously raising significant concerns regarding procedural fairness, accountability, cybersecurity, transparency, and the preservation of due process. The growing interdependence of global economies has considerably increased the volume and complexity of international commercial disputes. Traditional dispute resolution mechanisms are increasingly challenged by technological disruptions, cross-border digital transactions, and evolving business models. Arbitration, once viewed primarily as an alternative to litigation, has consequently evolved into an essential pillar of international commercial governance. Yet the digital transformation of arbitral processes compels legal scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and institutions to reconsider foundational principles of arbitration, including party autonomy, confidentiality, impartiality, enforceability, and access to justice. Technological innovation has expanded the possibilities of dispute resolution beyond conventional institutional frameworks. Artificial intelligence is increasingly being employed in legal research, document review, contract analysis, case management, and predictive assessment of legal outcomes. Online dispute resolution platforms have demonstrated remarkable effectiveness in resolving low-value commercial disputes and facilitating cross- border negotiations through virtual proceedings. Blockchain technology promises greater transparency in evidence preservation and execution of smart contracts, while digital platforms have enabled virtual hearings that significantly reduce costs and geographical barriers. However, these innovations simultaneously introduce critical legal and ethical concerns regarding algorithmic bias, explainability of automated decision-making, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, data privacy, digital exclusion, and the extent to which technology should influence adjudicatory discretion. The relationship between arbitration and global justice has therefore become increasingly significant. Arbitration is no longer confined to resolving private commercial disputes; it now plays a vital role in international investment, infrastructure development, energy projects, environmental governance, intellectual property protection, digital commerce, and sustainable development. Contemporary arbitration must therefore balance efficiency with fairness, technological innovation with human oversight, and commercial autonomy with public accountability. Questions concerning equitable access to justice, enforceability of arbitral awards across jurisdictions, regulatory harmonization, and protection of public interest have assumed renewed importance within the evolving landscape of international dispute resolution. The rapid digitalization of legal systems following the COVID-19 pandemic further accelerated the adoption of virtual hearings, electronic evidence, cloud-based case management systems, and online arbitration platforms across jurisdictions. While these developments have enhanced procedural efficiency and reduced transactional costs, they have simultaneously exposed disparities in technological infrastructure, digital literacy, cybersecurity preparedness, and procedural safeguards. Consequently, policymakers and legal institutions worldwide are confronted with the challenge of designing arbitration frameworks that are technologically advanced while remaining consistent with the principles of natural justice, procedural fairness, and institutional legitimacy. Against this evolving backdrop, the International Conference on "Arbitration, Technology, and Global Justice" seeks to establish an interdisciplinary academic platform that critically examines the transformative relationship between arbitration, emerging technologies, and contemporary global legal governance. The conference intends to facilitate meaningful dialogue among judges, arbitrators, legal practitioners, policymakers, academicians, researchers, industry experts, technology professionals, and students from diverse jurisdictions. By encouraging comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives, the conference aims to explore both the opportunities and challenges arising from the integration of technology into arbitration while evaluating its broader implications for access to justice and international legal order. The conference further seeks to examine emerging jurisprudential developments under domestic and international arbitration regimes, including institutional arbitration, enforcement of arbitral awards, investor-State dispute settlement, mediation and hybrid ADR mechanisms, cybersecurity, digital evidence, data governance, sustainability, environmental disputes, and the ethical dimensions of artificial intelligence in dispute resolution. Particular emphasis will be placed upon understanding how technological innovation can strengthen the legitimacy, inclusiveness, efficiency, and resilience of international arbitration without compromising the fundamental values of justice and the rule of law. Recognising that arbitration increasingly operates within a digitally interconnected global environment, the conference aspires to contribute to scholarly discourse on developing future-ready legal frameworks capable of responding to emerging technological and commercial realities. It aims to promote evidence-based policy recommendations, foster international research collaborations, encourage comparative legal scholarship, and facilitate meaningful engagement between academia, arbitral institutions, industry stakeholders, and governmental bodies. Ultimately, the conference seeks to answer a fundamental question that confronts contemporary legal systems: How can international arbitration effectively harness technological innovation while preserving fairness, legitimacy, transparency, and global justice? Through keynote addresses, panel discussions, technical sessions, and scholarly deliberations, the conference endeavours to identify pathways for developing technologically responsive, ethically grounded, and internationally harmonised systems of dispute resolution capable of addressing the challenges of an increasingly digital and interconnected world.