Owain Stone | Global Arbitration Review This chapter draws from extensive experience serving as a quantum expert witness across numerous jurisdictions and international arbitrations. Over that time, I have seen, at first hand, how the presentation of quantum (damages) evidence can have a significant effect on the outcome of a case. The landscape of expert… Continue reading Best Practices for Presenting Quantum Evidence
Month: September 2025
No Construction Contract is Standard — Terms Matter
C. Andrew Gibson | Stoel Rives In 20-plus years of navigating construction contract negotiations and disputes, I have reviewed for clients a number of terms overlooked at signing that carry significant importance when a dispute arises: materials warranties limited to replacement costs (no tear-out, no install) and a 60-day notice period; limitations of liability clauses… Continue reading No Construction Contract is Standard — Terms Matter
Artificial Intelligence in Arbitration: Evidentiary Issues and Prospects
Katrina Limond | Global Arbitration Review Introduction The artificial intelligence (AI) genie is out of the bottle. In November 2022, OpenAI released its AI chatbot, ChatGPT. As at June 2025, it has amassed over 122.6 million daily active users and processes more than 1 billion queries daily.[1] GPT, the large language model (LLM) developed by… Continue reading Artificial Intelligence in Arbitration: Evidentiary Issues and Prospects
How Underwriting and Claims Are Reshaped by AI in Insurance — and How They Stay the Same
Katie Dwyer | Risk & Insurance The use of artificial intelligence in insurance continues to grow. Here’s how the industry is using AI to optimize and augment its processes while keeping people at the center of the equation. “Artificial intelligence” can sometimes summon images of robots run amok, or computers-turned-sentient-beings manipulating their users. It can… Continue reading How Underwriting and Claims Are Reshaped by AI in Insurance — and How They Stay the Same
Court Resolves Carriers’ Dispute Over Which Must Defend
Tred R. Eyerly | Insurance Law Hawaii The court agreed with Travelers that Lloyd’s had a duty to defend the underlying personal injury case. Travelers Indem. Co. v. Underwriters at Lloyd’s, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 118445 (S.D. N. Y. June 23, 2025). Jerome Avenue owned a multi-tenant property in the Bronx,… Continue reading Court Resolves Carriers’ Dispute Over Which Must Defend
