Artificial Intelligence (AI), particularly generative AI, has arrived in arbitration, whether we invited it in or not. Counsel is using it to summarize documents, draft outlines, and test arguments. Some arbitrators are understandably curious about whether (and how) it can assist with facilitating efficient and fair proceedings. The anxiety surrounding AI in arbitration is often framed in dramatic terms: loss of control, compromised neutrality, or “robots deciding cases.” The risk is far more …
Archives for February 2026
Feliu Case Summaries, February 2026
Prepared by Alfred Feliu, a Fellow of the College of Commercial Arbitrators, the Feliu Case Summaries (February 2026) provide a practical snapshot of notable, recent decisions shaping arbitration and ADR across U.S. federal and state courts. Organized by topic, the digest highlights key developments affecting arbitration agreements, threshold jurisdictional disputes, delegation and waiver arguments, unconscionability challenges, class and representative action issues, hearing and evidentiary …
College of Commercial Arbitrators Opens Applications for Associate Mentorship Program Focused on Building the Next Generation of Elite Arbitrators
AUSTIN, TX – In a profession where experience is essential, but opportunity can be difficult to access, the College of Commercial Arbitrators (CCA) is once again opening the door for emerging arbitrators ready to build lasting, high-quality careers in commercial arbitration. The CCA has opened applications for its 2026–2028 Associate Mentorship Program, a highly selective, two-year initiative designed to address one of the most persistent challenges in the field: how talented commercial …
Beware Of Generative AI
Experienced arbitrators and counsel well know that the FAA provides that an award may be vacated where it was procured by “undue means,” or the arbitrator was guilty of “misbehavior,” or “imperfectly executed” his or her powers. 9 U.S.C. § 10 (a)(1), (3), and (4). If you have thought to yourself that “nothing like that will ever happen to me,” using generative AI should make you think again as illustrated by three 2025 appellate cases in which non-existent cases were cited. In Kohls v. …