ICC arbitration

The International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC)

The ICC was founded in 1919 to promote international commerce and co-operation; the International Court of Arbitration of the ICC (the ICC Court) was established to administer ICC arbitration proceedings in 1923. Today, the ICC is one of the world’s leading arbitral institutions. For more information on the background and structure of the institution, see Practice Note: ICC (2021)—introduction to the ICC and arbitration under the ICC Rules.

The ICC administers arbitrations under the ICC Rules of Arbitration (ICC Rules). The most recent version of the ICC Rules (the 2021 ICC Rules) apply (generally) to arbitrations

To view the latest version of this document and thousands of others like it, sign-in with LexisNexis or register for a free trial.

Powered by Lexis+®
Latest Arbitration News

Switzerland - Revision of an arbitral award influenced by forgeries and fraud (A.________ v B.________, 4A_268/2025)

Arbitration analysis: In a judgment dated 22 October 2025 (4A_268/2025), the Swiss Federal Tribunal granted an application for revision of an international arbitral award rendered by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS 2018/O/5735), holding that the award had been influenced, to the detriment of the player, by criminal offences committed by his former agent. The criminal courts had established that the agent had submitted forged contracts and a fabricated email in order to mislead the sole arbitrator and obtain payment of an undue commission. Relying on Article 190a(1)(b) of the Swiss Private International Law Act (PILA), the Federal Tribunal set aside the award and remitted the case to the CAS. The decision is exceptional in Swiss arbitration practice, where successful revisions of arbitral awards based on criminal conduct remain extremely rare. It underscores the decisive evidentiary role played by criminal proceedings—particularly where criminal authorities, unlike arbitral tribunals, can rely on coercive powers and international mutual legal assistance to uncover fraud. More broadly, the judgment confirms that Swiss law provides an effective mechanism to ensure that arbitration cannot be instrumentalized as a vehicle for criminal misconduct. Written by Pierre Ducret, CMS Switzerland, counsel to the player before the Swiss Federal Tribunal, and in all related proceedings.

View Arbitration by content type :

Popular documents