By Dr. Kariuki Muigua, PhD (Leading Environmental Law Scholar, Policy Advisor, Natural Resources Lawyer and Dispute Resolution Expert from Kenya), Winner of Kenya’s ADR Practitioner of the Year 2021, ADR Publisher of the Year 2021, CIArb (Kenya) Lifetime Achievement Award 2021 and the African Arbitrator of the Year 2022*
With the introduction of diverse social media platforms that allow interconnectivity beyond national boundaries and enable cross-border relationships between clients and their dispute resolvers, the experts can use technology to tap into the ever-growing international Alternative modes of Dispute Resolution such as international arbitration, mediation, and Online Dispute Resolution (ODR), especially in the face of rapidly growing networking and borderless legal practice.
Online Mediation
Mediation is a negotiation process between two parties in the presence of a third party. Through a framework that will not force any solution that is not mutually acceptable, negotiation permits parties to fully control both the process and the outcome. As an informal dispute resolution procedure, negotiation gives parties complete authority over the process of identifying and discussing their difficulties, allowing them to negotiate a mutually acceptable solution without the involvement of a third party. It focuses on the parties’ similar interests rather than their respective strength or position. It is linked to voluntariness, cost-effectiveness, informality, an emphasis on interests rather than rights, innovative solutions, personal empowerment, greater party control, addressing fundamental causes of conflict, non-coerciveness, and long-term results. This makes it particularly applicable to normal life conflicts that would otherwise be exacerbated by any attempts to resolve them through litigation.
When participants in a negotiation reach a stalemate, they invite a third party of their choosing to assist them in resolving the issue, which is known as mediation. Mediation has many of the same benefits as negotiating. However, because mediation has no enforcement mechanism and relies on the goodwill of the parties, it suffers from its non-binding character, which means that if compliance is necessary, one must go to court to acquire it. The added advantages of online mediation are that parties need not to travel and the cost of mediation is fixed and parties can prepare financially from the start.
Online Commercial Arbitration
Due to its clear benefits over litigation, arbitration has grown in favour as the preferred method of resolving disputes, particularly among businesses. The most notable advantage of arbitration over litigation is its transnational application in international conflicts with low or no intervention from national courts, giving parties confidence that justice would be served in the most efficient manner possible. As a result, countries and regions all over the world are advocating international arbitration as the preferred method for resolving international conflicts.
International commercial arbitration in Africa will assist the business and investment community because it provides a viable structure for resolving international and regional conflicts. However, while commercial arbitration’s inherent flexibility has allowed it to adapt well to recent global changes, particularly the Covid-19 pandemic, due to its familiarity with remote communications, videoconferencing, and the use of technology to drive efficiencies, holding proceedings entirely (or nearly entirely) virtually has posed its own set of challenges, including concerns about worries over fair treatment, straightforwardness, secrecy, security, data protection and management; the presentation of submissions in a different way; how to manage numerous time regions; screen weariness; and network issues. Thus, even as the world moves towards embracing online commercial arbitration, there is a need for countries and stakeholders to come up with ways of overcoming the above listed challenges.
Block Chain Arbitration
Blockchain is defined as a “open, distributed ledger that can efficiently and permanently record transactions between two parties.” In its most basic form, a blockchain’s functioning premise is built on the connection of each transaction or movement as a “block” to the system, allowing the platform to develop indefinitely. The whole system is updated with each new transaction, and the transaction is accessible to all parties involved anywhere in the globe. The self-executing, next generation contracts used in Smart Contracts, Blockchain, and Arbitration are designed to achieve preset conditions.
By activating the arbitration clause embedded in the smart contract, Blockchain Arbitration can enable the storage and verification of rules, as well as automatic implementation (on a specific occurrence constituting a breach of the agreement). If a disagreement arises, the smart contract will alert the Arbitrator via a blockchain-based dispute resolution interface. A party can digitize the conditions of an agreement, lock the cash in a smart contract, and condition the smart contract such that the work is completed and the monies are received. The smart contract’s self-executing nature will automatically enforce the award and transmit the stipulated fee to the Arbitrator once the procedure is completed.
Due to its decentralized nature, blockchain arbitration currently presents several incompatibilities with the existing arbitration legal framework, such as the cryptographic form of the arbitration agreement and the lack of a seat of arbitration, to name a few. The notion of blockchain arbitration is one of the most recent advancements in ADR, and it aims to harness the benefits of the technology in dispute resolution. It is linked to the proliferation of e-contracts and smart contracts in commercial transactions throughout the world. There is, however, need for independent and further research on the topic of blockchain arbitration even as the international community moves to embrace the process.
*This article is an extract from the Article “The Evolving Alternative Dispute Resolution Practice: Investing in Digital Dispute Resolution in Kenya” by Dr. Kariuki Muigua, PhD, Kenya’s ADR Practitioner of the Year 2021 (Nairobi Legal Awards), ADR Publisher of the Year 2021 and ADR Lifetime Achievement Award 2021 (CIArb Kenya) and African Arbitrator of the Year 2022. Dr. Kariuki Muigua is a foremost Environmental Law and Natural Resources Lawyer and Scholar, Sustainable Development Advocate and Conflict Management Expert in Kenya. Dr. Kariuki Muigua is a Senior Lecturer of Environmental Law and Dispute resolution at the University of Nairobi School of Law and The Center for Advanced Studies in Environmental Law and Policy (CASELAP). He has published numerous books and articles on Environmental Law, Environmental Justice Conflict Management, Alternative Dispute Resolution and Sustainable Development. Dr. Muigua is also a Chartered Arbitrator, an Accredited Mediator, the Africa Trustee of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators and the Managing Partner of Kariuki Muigua & Co. Advocates. Dr. Muigua is recognized among the top 5 leading lawyers and dispute resolution experts in Kenya by the Chambers Global Guide 2022.
References
Muigua, K., “The Evolving Alternative Dispute Resolution Practice: Investing in Digital Dispute Resolution in Kenya,” Available at: http://kmco.co.ke/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/The-Evolving-Alternative-Dispute-Resolution-Practice-Investing-in-Digital-Dispute-Resolution-in-Kenya-Kariuki-Muigua.pdf (accessed 18th June 2022).