Stephenson Harwood’s Dispute Resolution team will be taking part in a number of events at LIDW 2026.
- Ros Prince and Priya Grigoriadis will host a panel on ‘When winning isn’t enough: Asset recovery in the face of enforcement obstacles.’
3 June 2026, 4:30-8pm
Register and view more information here: LIDW 2026 - When winning isn’t enough – asset recovery in the face of enforcement obstacles
- Dan Smith and Donna Newman will lead a discussion on ‘Jurisdiction and intra-group corporate liability: key legal and commercial considerations.’
3 June 2026, 8:30-11am
Register and view more information here: LIDW 2026 - Jurisdiction and intra-group corporate liability: Key legal and commercial considerations (and breakfast)
- Tim Knight will host a panel exploring the implications of the Interchange pass-on judgment for indirect, consumer, and collective competition claims.
4 June 2026, 8:30-11am
Register and view more info here: LIDW 2026 - Has the Hanover Shoe dropped? The implications of the interchange pass-on judgment for indirect, consumer and collective competition claims.
- Daniel Boon and Henry Simpson will speak on ‘The arbitrator is dead, long live the Arbitrator: This house believes that human-led dispute resolution is slow, expensive and generally ineffective.’
3 June 2026, 4:30-8pm
Register and view more information here: LIDW 2026 - The arbitrator is dead, long live the AIbitrator: This house believes that human lead dispute resolution is slow, expensive and generally ineffective
- Tal Goldsmith will take part in a panel with Maitland Chambers on ‘20 Years of the CBIR: the Perks and Pitfalls of Cross-border Insolvency Recognition.’
3 June 2026, 4:30-8pm
Register and view more information here: LIDW 2026 - 20 Years of the CBIR: the Perks and Pitfalls of Cross-border Insolvency Recognition
- Ros Prince will also take part in a panel with Trilegal and FTI consulting on 'Geopolitics, Capital, Trust and Resilience - UK, India and the New World Order'
4 June 2026
Register and view more information here: LIDW 2026 - Geopolitics, Capital, Trust and Resilience: UK, India and the New World Order