2022 London Global Conference

2022 LONDON GLOBAL CONFERENCE

November 30 – December 2, 2022
Goodenough College, Mecklenburgh Square
London WC1N 2AB, UK

Each year, NYSBA’s International Section hosts a conference in a different city outside of the United States to provide American and foreign colleagues the opportunity to meet, network, and expand their international practices. Our most recent conferences have been held in New York City, Tokyo, Montréal, Antigua, Guatemala, Paris, São Paulo, Vienna, Hanoi, Lisbon, Panama, Sydney and the list goes on! This year, the conference will consist of three days of Continuing Legal Education (CLE) panels and plenaries, including various hot topics in international law. The meeting also offers networking opportunities in the form of extended breaks, luncheons, receptions, dinners, including our traditional gala dinner, and social and cultural events.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Venue: The Law Society of England and Wales, 113 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1PL

2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Executive Committee Meeting

(EC members only)

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Chapter Chairs Meeting

(Chapter Chairs only)

5:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Latin American Council Meeting

(LAC members only)

7:00 pm - 10:00 pm

Executive Committee Dinner

(EC members only)

Venue: Bleeding Heart Bistro, 7 Bleeding Heart Yard, Greville St., London EC1N 8SJ, UK
Room: No. 1 Dining Room

DAY 1 - Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Venue: Goodenough College, Mecklenburgh Square, London WC1N 2AB, UK

8:00 am – 5:00 pm

Registration | Outside the Great Hall

8:30 am - 9:00 am

Welcome Remarks | Great Hall

Prof. Azish E. Filabi, International Section Chair, New York State Bar Association

Sherry Levin Wallach, President, New York State Bar Association

Honourable Alice Walpole, OBE, Director of Goodenough College

9:00 am - 9:30 am

Welcome and Opening Address | Great Hall

The Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, The Right Honourable The Lord Burnett of Maldon

9:30 am – 9:45 am

Networking Break | LH Large Common Room

9:45 am – 10:00 am

Ukraine and the Legal Frameworks for Justice and Accountability | Great Hall

10:00 am -11:30 am

Law in War: The role of law in conflict and post-conflict matters - PLENARY | Great Hall

This panel will explore the role of law in conflict and post-conflict situations. Panelists will discuss the role of the UN, the ICC, and other international bodies in addressing human rights, war crimes, and other criminal matters that arise in conflict. The panel will also address strategic litigation and arbitration relating to property, assets, sanctions, and other civil matters.

1.5 CLE Credits

11:30 am – 12:45 pm

Standing Fork Buffet Lunch | LH Large Common Room

12:45 pm – 1:35 pm

The Emperor Has No Clothes: Reimaging DEI Initiatives in the Legal Industry Through Mindfulness - PLENARY | Great Hall

This fireside chat will discuss incorporating a mindfulness approach to DEI through review of historic constructs plagued by divisive classifications in comparison to an understanding how each individual impacts the professional ecosystem.

1.0 CLE Credit

1:45 pm - 3:00 pm

PANEL 1 | Asset Tracing/Freezing: ‘Tracing the Untraceable’ | Great Hall

Sponsored by Ernst and Young LLP UK

The Asset Tracing and Recovery Panel will discuss the latest developments in cross-border asset recovery, focusing in particular on fraud, cryptocurrency, enforcement, and discovery, as well as important differences among civil and common law jurisdictions in this practice area.

1.5 CLE Credits

1:45 pm - 3:00 pm

PANEL 2 | From The Ground Up – Taking A Pre-Emptive and Holistic View of International Arbitration Clauses in Order to Avoid the Pitfalls of International Arbitration | Churchill Room

Arbitration is an increasingly attractive dispute resolution mechanism for disputants worldwide. It has proven itself to be resilient to global shocks and, generally, a reliable mechanism. International arbitration is not without its risks when it comes to the conduct of international arbitration and the enforcement of awards. The problems often arise because of an incomplete or unclear arbitration agreement. Nonetheless, the risks and pitfalls can often be considered and mitigated by the parties to ensure that any arbitration – just like the transaction underlying the parties’ relationship – reflects the parties’ clear agreement. This panel will draw from a broad array of legal and business professionals to discuss the best approaches to negotiating, agreeing and drafting arbitration provisions. Recent case law will be discussed and considered to assist professionals in their assessment of arbitration for international matters.

1.5 CLE Credits

1:45 pm - 3:00 pm

PANEL 3 | How Should We Deter Lawyers from Being Professional Enablers of Kleptocracy and Grand Corruption? | WGH Large Common Room

The Russian invasion of Ukraine and attempt to impose sanctions on a wide range of individuals close to the Putin regime has shone a spotlight on the professional service providers in global financial centers who act for them. It is widely claimed that such professionals, including lawyers, are enabling or facilitating kleptocracy and grand corruption through the provision of these services. Campaigners argue for tighter regulation and strong penalties; the legal profession cites the right to representation and the fact that the services being provided are within the law. This panel will explore whether it is possible to find a middle ground which respects long-sanding legal principles while slowing down the flow of facilitating services to those who are corrupt.

1.5 CLE Credits

3:00 pm – 3:30 pm

Networking Break | LH Large Common Room

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm

PANEL 4 | Cross-Atlantic Estate Planning: Wealth Transfer Planning and Administration in an Internationally-Challenging Time | Great Hall

The panel will consider the newest challenges for estate planning and trust and estate administration that confront individuals and families with multiple nationalities, immigration and tax statuses and multijurisdictional property holdings and investments, especially those with multiple connections with the UK, the USA, Canada, and other important jurisdictions in Europe and around the globe.

1.0 CLE Credit

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm

PANEL 5 | Shareholder Litigation | Churchill Room

Shareholder litigations, which have long been a prominent feature of the legal landscape in the United States, seem to be gathering momentum in the United Kingdom and Europe. Drawing on extensive experience from work on US matters and insights from early cases in the UK and Europe, this expert panel will address some of the key legal, economic, and financial issues arising in shareholder litigations.

Topics include:
• What is behind the recent upswing in activity in the UK and Europe? What are the factors that may limit the growth of this market?
• How have economic principles and analysis been applied in the US context to assess issues of loss causation, materiality, damages and reliance? To what extent can similar approaches be applied in other jurisdictions?

1.0 CLE Credit

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm

PANEL 6 | Technology, Cybersecurity and Ethics: What’s a Lawyer to Do? | WGH Large Common Room

Ethical, compliance, and risk management threats and developing multinational cybersecurity and data privacy regulation are rapidly changing. What do lawyers need to know to be able to address the issues they raise? The panel will address such issues as:
• What cybersecurity concerns affect providing services to clients?
• What ethical obligations require addressing these issues?
• What are the risks to lawyers for failing to understand the technology they use?
• Why isn’t this just an IT issue?
• What are the potential costs to your firm and your clients? How can you mitigate them?

1.0 CLE Credit

6:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Advent Carol Service | Temple Church, Temple, London EC47 7BB, UK

7:00 pm - 10:00 pm

President’s Reception | Middle Temple Hall, Middle Temple Ln, Temple, London EC4Y 9AT, UK

Sponsored by EY

DAY 2 - Thursday, December 1, 2022

Venue: Goodenough College, Mecklenburgh Square, London WC1N 2AB, UK

7:30 am – 5:00 pm

Registration | Outside the Great Hall

8:00 am – 9:00 am

KEYNOTE | Great Hall

The Power of Uniqueness

No MCLE Credit

9:00 am - 10:15 am

PLENARY | Great Hall

“S” IS THE ESSENCE OF ESG: Psychosocial Risks, Mental Health & Wellbeing at Work
There are some standards that are well established, but the “S” standards are still beyond the grasp of many organizations and arguable the foundation of accomplishing ESG standards that are transformative to create sustainable impact.

In this program we will provide an overview of the 3 elements of ESG with focus on the social element, provide recommendations and reasons why it is so important, how to create sustainable change by focusing on the psychosocial risks in your organization, what the advantages are of increasing ESG standards, and what still needs to be worked on in this area from a legal, social and business perspective.

1.5 CLE Credits

10:15 am - 10:45 am

Networking Break | LH Large Common Room

10:45 am - 12:00 pm

PANEL 7 | Financial Regulation/ Money Laundering Hot Topics | Great Hall

This panel will discuss global legal and regulatory compliance challenges regarding financial crimes, including anti-money laundering, litigation, investigations, and government enforcement.

1.5 CLE Credits

10:45 am - 12:00 pm

PANEL 8 | Transatlantic Antitrust Class Actions | Churchill Room

• Emerging lessons for deploying expert evidence
• Implications for managing transatlantic class actions
• Impact of the rising class action regime on particular antitrust cases

1.5 CLE Credits

10:45 am - 12:00 pm

PANEL 9 | Data Security in Times of War | WGH Large Common Room

Recent history has taught us that physical conflicts now often spill over into cyberspace. The war in Ukraine has illustrated how cyber-teams quickly joined the war either in helping to defend Ukrainian national infrastructure (such as the loose alliance of hackers known as Anonymous) or in offering assistance to President Putin with his war aims (such as members of the ransomware gang CONTI). This illustrious panel which includes some of the world’s leading experts on cyber warfare and specialist lawyers from both sides of the Atlantic. They will discuss the issues and give practical tips to help reduce the risk of being drawn into the conflict.

1.5 CLE Credits

12:00 pm - 1:45 pm

Standing Fork Buffet Lunch | LH Large Common Room

1:45 pm - 3:00 pm

Panel 10 | All the World is Trade | Churchill Room

This panel focuses on the “hot” trade issues of the moment: Sanctions (e.g., Russia, Belarus), Forced Labor Import Restrictions (e.g., Xinjiang, Malaysia), Transfer Pricing, Brexit, and others that your clients must deal with now and for the foreseeable future. These trade issues affect not just multinationals but also companies and persons whose business involves importing or exporting. Whether you are advising on establishing a company, sourcing from a new supplier, general cross-border transactions, or an M&A deal, you will gain insight on what is needed to counsel your clients on due diligence, proper compliance and avoiding penalties.

Our panel features a roundtable discussion by international attorneys from the U.S., the UK, the EU, Canada, Mexico, Asia and So. America with decades of experience.

1.5 CLE Credits

1:45 pm - 3:00 pm

Panel 11 | Digital Assets – Not A Virtual Reality Anymore? | WGH Large Common Room
1.5 CLE Credits

3:00 pm - 3:30 pm

Networking Break | LH Large Common Room

3:30 pm - 4:45 pm

PANEL 12 | Legal Technology & Innovation | Churchill Room

Sponsored by Ernst and Young LLP UK

A practical approach to the tools and technologies available to support investigation and litigation outcomes.

1.5 CLE Credits

3:30 pm - 4:45 pm

PANEL 13 | Fighting Modern Day Slavery: The Role of the Consumer | WGH Large Common Room

• Introduction: Are we all complicit?
• The UK Experience: Modern Day Slavery Act 2015
• Round table: The role of consumer on tackling Modern Day Slavery

1.5 CLE Credits

4:55 pm – 6:10 pm

PANEL 14 | Art at War | Churchill Room

The impetus for having this topic as the focus of the Conference is, of course, the war in Ukraine. It is against that troubling background that the Conference will examine and discuss the various ways in which law intersects with war and armed conflict. This includes the legal framework of war; the functions of relevant international organizations and the role of the legal profession.

The panel will consist of legal experts and experts from academia and the public sphere. The Panel will look at ways in which a country might protect its works of art and cultural heritage in times of conflict; consider national and international legal frameworks relevant to the protection of art and cultural heritage; and look at the challenges inherent in enforcing legal rights in and to disputed works of art and cultural objects.

There will be expert insight into UK government policy in relation to the protection of cultural heritage in the Iraq conflict and the ethical role of the military in preserving cultural objects in a conflict zone. The role of UNESCO and the Blue Shield will be explained and examined.

The discussion will also involve a representative from a national institution (national museum/art gallery) who will explore the involvement of state institutions in the collection of works of art from conflict zones; the legal frameworks; and whether objects of cultural heritage can or should be repatriated to their countries of origin.

1.5 CLE Credits

4:55 pm – 6:10 pm

PANEL 15 | Is Remote Working Remotely Possible? The Impact of COVID on the Remote Working Legal Landscape | WGH Large Common Room

Airbnb recently announced that its employees would be able to permanently work remotely without any pay cuts or caps on raises. This new policy embraces the new future of working remotely, allowing employees to work from anywhere, even while travelling in other countries. While more companies are being creative in balancing changing employee expectations with the desire to maintain efficiency and productivity, how many have fully grasped the legal and practical considerations of a fully remote workforce?

This panel seeks to explore the legal issues that arise from remote working arrangements and the potential legal risks of such fully remote or hybrid models of work. Employment law experts from a variety of jurisdictions compare how issues that arise from this are being approached in their respective jurisdictions, including:
• Secure transmission of proprietary information
• Impact of remotely working on independent contractor vs. employee status?
• Enforcement of non-compete covenants across borders
• Workmen compensation for remote workplace accidents
• Equal treatment of remote vs. on-site workers


At the end of this program, attendees should be able to:
1) Identify the unique challenges and strategies to maintain privacy and security of sensitive information
2) Describe the legal test in each jurisdiction when determining whether a remote worker is an independent contractor or an employee
3) Understand the complexities of enforcement surrounding non-compete covenants when employees cross borders
4) Understand liability for workmen compensation in remote workplace accidents
5) identify the risk of discrimination faced by remote workers and how to mitigate against such risks

1.5 CLE Credits

6:30 pm – 11:00 pm

Reception & Dinner | Great Hall, Goodenough College

Sponsored by Cornerstone Research

DAY 3 - Friday, December 2, 2022

Venue: Goodenough College, Mecklenburgh Square, London WC1N 2AB, UK

8:30 am – 5:00 pm

Registration | Outside the Great Hall

9:00 am - 10:15 am

PLENARY | Dealing with Crisis and External Threats: Recognize, Ready, Respond, Recovery | Great Hall

Sponsored by Ernst and Young LLP UK

10:15 am – 10:45 am

Networking Break | LH Large Common Room

10:45 am – 12:00 pm

PANEL 16 | Managing “Behavioural Risk” in The Context of Corporate Culture and ESG | Great Hall

As investor interest in environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations is on the rise, companies face the challenge of not only implementing a “good” corporate culture, but also demonstrating to regulators and investors how their culture aligns with their ESG goals. Investors aim to identify companies with better (or substandard) ethical cultures, and seek new sources of data for ESG aligned investing. The panelists will discuss how data and behavioral science-informed techniques can help improve corporate culture, and how innovations in culture assessment can help ESG investing.

1.5 CLE Credits

10:45 am – 12:00 pm

PANEL 17 | Court Orders for Oral Evidence and Disclosure by Non-Parties in Support of Foreign Arbitration Proceedings: The Changing Picture in England and the US | Churchill Room

Following the major decision of the US Supreme Court in Luxshare limiting the scope of 28 U.S.C. §1782, and the decision of the English Court of Appeals in A v C extending similar powers, the ability of litigants to obtain the aid of courts in England and America in taking evidence from non-parties in support of foreign arbitral proceedings has changed enormously in just a few years. Further changes may be on the horizon in England with the ongoing review of these powers by the Law Commission.

In an area which raises important questions about the interaction between arbitration and the courts, this panel draws together leading practitioners from both the US and the UK to discuss the recent developments in England and America, and the future scope of these powers on both sides of the Atlantic, including the future of §1782 type relief in federal courts.

1.5 CLE Credits

10:45 am – 12:00 pm

PANEL 18 | Market Manipulation | WGH Large Common Room

Sponsored by Cornerstone Research

“It is an old Wall Street adage that it takes volume to make prices move." • Establishing intent. • Spoofing and layering. • Benchmark manipulation, from LIBOR to precious metals. • Differentiating legitimate pre-hedging or hedging from manipulation • Approaches to damages • Emerging areas

1.5 CLE Credits

12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Standing Fork Buffet Lunch | LH Large Common Room

1:30 pm - 2:45 pm

PANEL 19 | Sustainability and International Regulation | Great Hall
1.5 CLE Credits

1:30 pm - 2:45 pm

PANEL 20 | The Art of Persuasion: International Styles Compared | Churchill Room
1.5 CLE Credits

1:30 pm - 2:45 pm

PANEL 21 | Show Me the Money: Asset Protection in High-Net-Worth Global Divorce Cases | WGH Large Common Room

High-net-worth divorce clients tend to have assets located across the globe especially considering the rise of cross-cultural marriages. When the spouses seek to divorce, a court may have limitations on compelling information on overseas assets, valuing those assets, or mandating a disposition of those assets. Given that courts are limited in addressing division of marital assets located outside of its reach, it is important to work with high-net-worth clients at the time of marriage to employ an asset protection plan should a divorce be an eventuality.

Expert panelists will discuss the selection of marital property regimes and memorializing asset division in a valid and enforceable global prenuptial agreement. Panelists will discuss strategies to shield assets and employ sophisticated tax strategies. Panelists will also touch on topics of international evidence and discovery concerning international assets as well as various approaches in dividing international marital assets.

1.5 CLE Credits

3:00 pm – 4:15 pm

PLENARY | The Future of Justice: Young Lawyers and Their Impact in the Profession | Great Hall

Sponsored by BARBRI

A panel composed of practitioners from New York, Scotland, and England and Wales will discuss what they see as the main opportunities and challenges for them in today’s law climate, including perspectives from junior practitioners and their impact in the profession.

1.5 CLE Credits

6:30 pm - 8:00 pm

Gala Reception + Networking Reception for Young Lawyers | Sponsored by BARBRI | Bench Rooms

The Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn, The Treasury Office, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, WC2A 3TL London, UK

8:00 pm - 10:30 pm

Gala Dinner | Great Hall

DAY 1 – Wednesday, November 30, 2022

8:30 am – 9:00 am          Welcome Remarks

  • Prof. Azish E. Filabi, International Section Chair, NYSBA
  • Sherry Levin Wallach, President, New York State Bar Association
  • Honourable Alice Walpole, OBE, Director of Goodenough College

9:00 am – 9:30 am           Welcome and Opening Address

  • The Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, The Right Honourable The Lord Burnett of Maldon

9:45 am – 10:00 am        Ukraine and the Legal Frameworks for Justice and Accountability 

  • Anna Ogrenchuk, Ukrainian Bar Association President & LCF Law Group, Ukraine
  • Justice Tetyana Antsupova, Cassation Administrative Court, Supreme Court, Ukraine

10:00 am -11:30 am       Plenary | Law in War: The Role of Law in Conflict and Post-Conflict Matters

  • Alexandra Leigh-valentine Piscionere, New York, NY
  • Carlos Ramos-Mrosovsky, Baker & Hostler LLP, New York, NY
  • Thomas H. P. Francis, 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square Chambers, London, UK
  • Judge Ivana Hrdličková, President, Special Tribunal for Lebanon
  • Maryam Hussain, Ernst & Young LLP, London, UK
  • David Josse KC, Five St. Andrew’s Hill, London, UK

12:45 pm – 1:35 pm       Plenary | The Emperor Has No Clothes: Reimaging DEI Initiatives in the Legal Industry Through Mindfulness

  • D.L. Morriss, Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP, Chicago, IL & New York, NY
  • Simon L. Des-Etages, HSBC Global Private Banking and Wealth, London, UK

1:45 pm – 3:00 pm           PANELS 1 TO 3

Panel 1 – Asset Tracing/Freezing: ‘Tracing the Untraceable’

  • Gonzalo S. Zeballos, Baker & Hostetler LLP, New York, NY
  • Richard Abbey, Ernst & Young LLP UK, London, UK
  • Jorge Luis Arenales, Arias, Guatemala
  • Oren Warshavsky, Baker & Hostetler LLP, New York, NY
  • David de Ferrars, Taylor Wessing LLP, London, UK

Panel 2 – From The Ground Up – Taking A Pre-Emptive and Holistic View of International Arbitration Clauses in Order to Avoid the Pitfalls of International Arbitration

  • Myrna Barakat Friedman, FCIArb, Independent Arbitration and Mediator, New York, NY
  • Chris Jon Fladgate, FCIArb, Garson, Segal, Steinmetz, Fladgate LLP, New York, NY
  • Simon Barnes, Zurich Legacy Solutions, London, UK
  • Liam McMonagle, Thorntons Law LLP, Edinburgh, Glasgow, UK
  • Aurélie Arenales Huet, BFPL Avocats, Paris, France

Panel 3 – How Should We Deter Lawyers from Being Professional Enablers of Kleptocracy and Grand Corruption?

  • Professor Robert Barrington, Centre for the Study of Corruption, University of Sussex, Falmer, England
  • Azish E. Filabi, The American College of Maguire Center for Ethics in Financial Services, Associate Professor of Business Ethics, King of Prussia, PA, and New York, NY
  • Guy Beringer CBE, QC, LegalUK, London, UK
  • Lucy Wolley-Dod, Norton Rose LLP, London, UK
  • Susan Hawley, Executive Director, Spotlight on Corruption

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm          PANELS 4 TO 6

Panel 4 – Cross-Atlantic Estate Planning: Wealth Transfer Planning and Administration in an Internationally Challenging Time

  • Michael W. Galligan, Phillips Nizer LLP, New York, NY
  • Rachel Roche LL.M. TEP, Roche Legal, UK
  • Frédéric Barriault, LL.M. Taxation, Fasken LLP, Canada
  • William Smit, Amicorp, London, England
  • Alvaro J. Aguilar, LL.M TEP Lombardi Aguilar Group, Panama
  • Mariana Eguiarte-Morett, Sanchez Devanny, Mexico

Panel 5 – Shareholder Litigation

  • Shaama Pandya, Cornerstone Research, Washington
  • Ronnie Barnes, Cornerstone Research, London, UK
  • Simon Clarke, Herbert Smith Freehills, London, UK
  • Sarah Penfold, Herbert Smith Freehills, London, UK
  • Kelwin Nicholls, Clifford Chance LLP, London, UK
  • Mary Eaton, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, New York
  • Francois Berbinau, BFPL Avocats, Paris, France

Panel 6 – Technology, Cybersecurity and Ethics: What’s a Lawyer to Do?

  • Drew Jaglom, Tannenbaum Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt LLP, New York, NY
  • Diane E. O’Connell, Sorting it Out / do ADR, Inc., New York, NY
  • Jonathan P. Armstrong, Cordery, London, UK
  • Alejandro Massot, Randle Legal, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Nazar Chernyavsky, Sayenko Kharenko, Ukraine

DAY 2 – Thursday, December 1, 2022

8:00 am – 9:00 am          Keynote | The Power of Uniqueness 

  • Diane E. O’Connell, Sorting it Out / do ADR, Inc., New York, NY 

9:00 am – 10:15 am         Plenary | “S” IS THE ESSENCE OF ESG: Psychosocial Risks, Mental Health &Wellbeing at Work

  • Diane E. O’Connell, Sorting it Out / do ADR, Inc., New York, NY
  • Chris Cummins, Wellbeing at Work World, Brighton, England
  • Richard Martin, Mindful Business Charter, London, UK
  • Laura David, Smart About Health, London, UK
  • Janet Thompson Jackson, Esq., Well Law, US
  • Rob Stephenson, InsideOut LeaderBoard/FormScore, London, UK

10:45 am – 12:00 pm      PANELS 7 TO 9

Panel 7 – Financial Regulation/ Money Laundering Hot Topics

  • Judith Seddon, Dechert LLP, London, UK
  • David Kessler, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, New York, NY
  • Maria Nizzero, Royal United Services Institute, London, UK
  • Thomas H. P. Francis, 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square Chambers, London, UK
  • Cristina Bole, BCR Legal, Milan, Italy

Panel 8 – Transatlantic Antitrust Class Actions

  • Vikram Kumar, Cornerstone Research, London, UK
  • Michael Dean, Dentons, UK
  • Liam Colley, Cornerstone Research, London, UK
  • Elizabeth Jordan, Slaughter and May, London, UK
  • Kim Dietzel, Herbert Smith Freehills, London, UK
  • Jay L. Himes, Office of the New York State Attorney General, New York, NY

Panel 9 – Data Security in Times of War

  • Jonathan P. Armstrong, Cordery, London, UK
  • Gerald J. Ferguson, Baker & Hostetler LLP, New York, NY
  • Don Smith, Cyber Intelligence, Secureworks,
  • Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
  • Tomoyuki Otsuki, Kyndryl Japan, Japan
  • Carolyn Brown, British Medical Association, London, UK

1:45 pm – 3:00 pm           PANELS 10 TO 11

Panel 10 – Digital Assets – Not A Virtual Reality Anymore?

  • Carlos Mauricio S. Mirandola, CMSquare Ltda, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Andrea Huber, Pestalozzi Attorneys at Law, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Ann Sofie Cloots, Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK
  • Piotr Wojtowicz, Heuking, Kühn, Lüer, Wojtek, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Howard A. Fischer, Moses & Singer LLP, New York, NY

Panel 11 – All the World is Trade

  • Robert J. Leo, Meeks Sheppard Leo & Pillsbury LLP, New York, NY
  • Angela M. Santos, ArentFox Schiff, New York, NY
  • Glen Kelley, Jacobson, Burton & Kelley LLC, New York, NY
  • Bernardine Adkins, Gowling WLG, London, UK
  • Jessica Horwitz, Bennett Jones LLP, Toronto, CA
  • John Grayston, Grayston Company, Brussels, Belgium
  • Eduardo Sotelo, Sanchez Devanny, Mexico City, Mexico
  • Mauro Berenholc, Pinheiro Neto Advogados, São Paulo, Brazil

3:30 pm – 4:45 pm           PANELS 12 TO 13

Panel 12 – Legal Technology & Innovation

  • Jeff Shapiro, Forensic & Integrity Services, UK
  • Melina Efstathiou, Eversheds Sutherland, London, UK
  • Emily Wylie-Ballard, RPC LLP, UK
  • Kofi Mills-Bampoe, CANDEY, London, UK
  • Laura Keily, Immediation, Melbourne, Australia
  • Alex Scott, Clifford Chance LLP, London, UK

Panel 13 – Fighting Modern Day Slavery: The Role of the Consumer

  • Pedro Pais de Almeida, Abreu & Associados – Sociedade de Advogados RL, Lisbon, Portugal
  • Paola Fudakowska, TRIAL International, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Michel Veuthey, Ambassador of the Sovereign Order of Malta to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Bex Hall, Sedex, London, UK

4:55 pm – 6:10 pm          PANEL 14 TO 15

Panel 14 – Art at War

  • Lucy Keane, Signature Litigation LLP, London, UK and Gibraltar
  • Rory J. Radding, Mauriel Kapouytian Woods LLP, New York, NY
  • Anne-Sophie Nardon, Avocate à la Cour, Paris and Partner in Borghese Associés, Paris, France
  • Peter Stone OBE, UNESCO Chair in Cultural Property, Protection and Peace; President of the Blue Shield, University of Newcastle, UK
  • Marco Toracca, Compliance Officer, Sotheby’s, London, UK

Panel 15 – Is Remote Working Remotely Possible? The Impact of COVID on the Remote

Working Legal Landscape: Practical Considerations

  • Devjani Mishra, Littler Mendelson P.C., New York, NY
  • Nadia Moynihan, August Law Corporation, Singapore
  • Elliot Hammer, Branch Austin McCormick LLP, London, UK
  • Deirdre Lynch, ByrneWallace LLP, Dublin, Ireland
  • Fiona Meany, Jones Lang LaSalle Inc., London, UK

DAY 3 – Friday, December 2, 2022

9:00 am – 10:15 am         Plenary | Dealing with Crisis and External Threats: Recognize, Ready, Respond, Recovery

  • Jeffrey S. Sallet, Ernst & Young LLP, Boston, MA
  • Peter D.C. Mason, Arbitra International, Brooklyn, NY

10:45 am – 12:00 pm     PANELS 16 TO 18

Panel 16 Managing “Behavioural Risk” in The Context of Corporate Culture and ESG

  • Prof. Azish E. Filabi, The American College of Maguire Center for Ethics in Financial Services, Associate Professor of Business Ethics, King of Prussia, PA, and New York, NY
  • Amanda N. Raad, Ropes & Gray, London, UK
  • Alison Taylor, Ethical Systems, New York, NY
  • Rick Borges, Financial Services Culture Board, London, UK
  • Laura Atherton, Global Health Unit, GSK, London, UK

Panel 17 Court Orders for Oral Evidence and Disclosure by Non-Parties in Support of Foreign  Arbitration Proceedings: The Changing Picture in England and the US

  • Teresa Rosen Peacocke, Outer Temple Chambers, New York, NY
  • Jonathan Schaffer-Goddard, Holwell Shuster & Goldberg, New York, NY; 4 Pump Court, London, UK
  • Carlos Ramos-Mrosovsky, Baker & Hostler LLP, New York, NY
  • Prof. Linda Silberman, New York University, New York, NY
  • Richard Lissack KC, Fountain Court Chambers, London, UK
  • Nigel Tozzi KC, 4 Pump Court Chambers, London, UK

Panel 18 Market Manipulation

  • Sean Lew, Cornerstone Research, New York, NY
  • Yan Cao, Cornerstone Research, New York, NY
  • Susana Cao Miranda, Linklaters, London, UK
  • Alexander Morris, King & Wood Mallesons, Sydney, Australia
  • Matthew L. Mazur, Dechert LLP, London, UK
  • Jonathan Carter, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, New York, NY

1:30 pm – 2:45 pm           PANELS 19 TO 21

Panel 19 Sustainability and International Regulation

  • Howard A. Fischer, Moses & Singer LLP, New York, NY
  • Katharina Weghmann, Ernst & Young LLP
  • Justine Cowling, Clyde & Co LLP, London, UK
  • Andrew Otis, Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP, New York, NY
  • Sonali Siriwardena, Simmons & Simmons, London, UK

Panel 20 The Art of Persuasion: International Styles Compared

  • Hon. Loretta A. Preska, United States District Court, New York, NY
  • Neil Quartaro, Cozen O’Connor, New York, NY
  • Justice David Barniville, President of the High Court, Ireland
  • The Rt. Hon. Dame Elizabeth Gloster, DBE, PC, One Essex Court, London, UK
  • Andrew Spink KC, Outer Temple Chambers, London, UK

Panel 21 Show Me the Money: Asset Protection in High-Net-Worth Global Divorce Cases

  • Peter R. Stambleck, Mosberg Sharma Stambleck Gross LLP, New York, NY
  • Brett S. Ward, Blank Rome LLP, New York, NY
  • James Riby, Charles Russell Speechlys, London, UK
  • James Heathcote, Sanctoras Private Wealth and Tax Advisory, London, UK
  • Lois Langton, Howard Kennedy, London, UK
  • Dr Markus Zwicky, Zwicky & Partner, Switzerland

3:00 pm – 4:15 pm          Plenary | The Future of Justice: Young Lawyers and Their Impact in the Profession

  • Sherry Levin Wallach, New York State Bar Association President, White Plains, NY
  • Katia Mehu, Mehu Law PLLC, New York, NY
  • Ayla Iridag, Ampersand Advocates, Edinburgh, UK
  • Sophie O’Sullivan, Outer Temple Chambers, London, UK
  • Claire Flores, BARBRI Global, New York, NY

3-day attorney registration fee includes programming from Wednesday to Friday, coffee breaks, lunches, Wednesday and Thursday reception, Friday gala reception and dinner, and CLE credit.

International Section Members (early bird until October 1)

 

$    995

 

International Section Members (standard)

 

$ 1,195
NYSBA Members

 

$ 1,295 Save $265 if you join the International Section before Oct. 1!

 

Young Lawyers Section Members

 

$    725 Slots are limited. Register today!

 

Non-NYSBA Members

 

 

 

$ 1,395

 

 

Once registered, you will receive a discount code to receive complimentary NYSBA and International Section membership until the end of the year (12/31/2022). Register today!

 

Guests $     675 Registration includes evening social events only.

Cancellation Notice:

Notice of cancellation must be received by November 1, 2022 in order to obtain a refund of fees.

Registration Deadline:

Last day of registration is on November 14, 2022. We do NOT accept on-site registrations.

Contact for Assistance:

Member Resource Center (MRC) at [email protected] or at 800-582-2452/ +1 (518) 464-4200 Opt. 2

Ernst & Young LLP

Lead Sponsor and President’s Reception Sponsor

Goodenough College

Venue Partner

Barbri Global

Gold Sponsor and Networking Reception for Young Lawyers Sponsor

disco_logo_7200 (2)

Gold Sponsor and Gala Dinner Sponsor

Cornerstone Research

Silver Sponsor and Thursday Reception Sponsor

Print

Bronze Sponsor

Baker Hostetler

Bronze Sponsor

Hinshaw

Networking Break Sponsor

Interested in sponsoring? Click here to download the sponsorship form.

For further sponsorship information, please contact: Carra Forgea | [email protected] | +1 (518) 487-5521

A) DISCOUNTED RATES

Availability of rooms is only guaranteed up to the cut-off date and reservations received after the specified date are accepted on a space and rate availability basis and cannot be guaranteed at the conference rate.

Doubletree By Hilton London – West End

Address: 92 Southampton Row, London WC1B 4BH, United Kingdom (9-min. walk to Goodenough College)

Group Rate: £299 including VAT and breakfast (Group rate will drop 1 week prior)

Cancellation: Individual cancellations free of charge until 1 week before arrival date

Reserve today: https://www.hilton.com/en/book/reservation/deeplink/?ctyhocn=LHRLBDI&groupCode=GNYSBA&arrivaldate=2022-11-30&departuredate=2022-12-02&cid=OM,WW,HILTONLINK,EN,DirectLink&fromId=HILTONLINKDIRECT

The Montague on the Gardens

Address: 15 Montague St, London WC1B 5BJ, United Kingdom (13-min. walk to Goodenough College)

Group Rate: £270 (Group rate will drop 45 days prior)

Group Name: “New York Bar State Association”

Reserve today by phone or email:

  • Red Carnation Group Reservations [email protected]
  • Telephone number/ UK toll free number: 0808 196 8893
  • US toll free number: +1 833 477 8313

B) OTHER NEARBY OPTIONS

C) BUDGET-FRIENDLY OPTIONS:

Is a negative COVID-19 test (PCR and/or serology) required for entry? 

No, please see the UK government website for more information: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/travel-to-england-from-another-country-during-coronavirus-covid-19

From 4am on Friday 18 March, all travelers to the UK will not need to take any COVID-19 tests or fill in a passenger locator form when travelling to the UK from abroad. These changes apply whether you are fully vaccinated or not.

  1. You do not need to take any COVID-19 tests before you travel or after you arrive.
  2. You do not need to fill in a UK passenger locator form.
  3. You do not need to quarantine when you arrive.

It includes people who are transiting through England. You should follow any rules that your travel provider tells you to follow.

Read more information at https://uk.usembassy.gov/covid-19-coronavirus-information/.

NOTE: You must be vaccinated to attend a NYSBA event.

Big Ben
16-storey Gothic clocktower and national symbol at the Eastern end of the Houses of Parliament
https://www.parliament.uk/bigben

Buckingham Palace
The Queen’s official London residence and a working royal palace.
https://www.rct.uk/visit/buckingham-palace

London Eye
Huge observation wheel giving passengers a privileged bird’s-eye view of the city’s landmarks.
https://www.londoneye.com/

St. Paul’s Cathedral
An Anglican cathedral in London and is the seat of the Bishop of London
https://www.stpauls.co.uk/

The British Museum
Huge showcase for global antiquities, including Egyptian mummies and ancient Greek sculptures.
https://www.britishmuseum.org/

Tower of London
Centuries of bloody history around a medieval castle, home to Crown Jewels and iconic Beefeaters.
https://www.hrp.org.uk/tower-of-london/

Westminster Abbey
Protestant abbey hosting daily services and every English and British coronation since 1066.
https://www.westminster-abbey.org/

For more information on the City of London, visit https://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/things-to-do.