Arbitration has emerged as a leading method of dispute resolution across sectors like commercial, construction, technology, and even entertainment. It’s no longer just an alternative to litigation, it is now central to modern dispute resolution strategies.
For law students, an internship in arbitration law provides invaluable exposure to the nuances of drafting, procedure, and strategy in both domestic and international disputes. But how can you stand out?
- Clause Drafting & Agreement Structuring
When interning in arbitration laws, interns are mostly given the task to assist in reviewing or drafting dispute settlement clauses prior to disputes arising. This calls for:
- Comprehending Tiered Clauses: Being aware of the possible sequential structure of arbitration, conciliation, and mediation.
- Language Clarity: Ensure all key elements, like seat, venue, institution, governing law, and language are clearly defined. Watch out for vague phrases like “Indian arbitration laws” (ambiguous) or dual-seat confusion. Clarity here avoids jurisdictional disputes later.
- Preventing Pathologies: Highlighting ambiguous or unenforceable clauses that could subsequently cause jurisdictional problems.
Tip: Study sample clauses from ICC, LCIA, or SIAC model agreements before your first day. This will create a little clause bank for easy access and further it will save you time and improve your skills.
- Procedural & Research Acumen
Additionally, interns are tasked with performing legal research and procedural mapping pertaining to certain arbitration or tribunal procedures. These assignments require:
- Rule Familiarity: Whether the rules are institutional standards, UNCITRAL laws, or the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, it is imperative to understand them.
- Jurisdictional Nuance: Understanding of the law of separability, Kompetenz-Kompetenz, and the conditions for temporary relief.
- Learn to efficiently mine precedents from Indian courts and international awards, this skill is critical when constructing persuasive arguments in memorials or briefs.
- Make a straightforward matrix that compares the main arbitration organisations (seat, schedule flexibility, challenge procedures).
- Communication & Soft Skills
Arbitration interns usually compose official emails for the team or interact with clients and coworkers. Partners in law firms appreciate well-written emails, especially when providing clients with updates or summarising tribunal rulings.
- Language Sensitivity: Learning to communicate politely, clearly, and culturally sensitively, particularly when settling disputes internationally.
- Accuracy, objectivity, and contextual awareness are the most crucial elements when taking notes during hearings.
Tip: Develop your ability to write objective summaries, client briefs, and follow-up emails. Despite not being taught in law school, it is crucial at an internship desk.
- Evaluation of Awards and Critical Thinking
When analysing prior arbitral decisions or helping to draft brief responses, legal interns must synthesise arguments and spot inconsistencies.
- Reasoning Structures: Understand the way arbitrators organise their findings, legal reasoning, and decisions.
- Finding the Gaps: Regardless of any procedural mistakes or evidence gaps, your evaluation must be legally sound and presented in an understandable manner.
- Utilisation in Strategy: Help your team relate the lines of reasoning from past awards to current instances in order to bolster their claims.
Tip: Examine previous awards that are accessible online and, in 500 words or less, explain the reasoning behind them and the factors that might have affected the result. It quickly develops evaluative skills.
5. Tribunal Etiquette & Professionalism
What often sets apart a good intern from a memorable one is not just their legal knowledge, but how they conduct themselves before, during, and after tribunal proceedings, whether in-person or virtual.
Here’s what matters most:
- Know When to Speak or Stay Silent: Interns are rarely expected to speak during hearings. Observe keenly, take notes diligently, and only speak if asked, and even then, only after checking with your reporting associate or senior. Avoid interrupting or reacting visibly to tribunal or opposing counsel’s remarks.
- Handle Tech Like a Pro: For virtual or hybrid hearings, ensure you log in 15–20 minutes early. Have backup links, chargers, and documents ready. If there’s a technical glitch (e.g., audio lag, disconnection), alert your team discreetly via internal chat, not in the main hearing window.
- Prepare Hearing Bundles Meticulously: Assist in reviewing pagination, indexing, hyperlinking, and ensuring all documents are aligned across the shared and printed bundles. An error here can delay proceedings or affect your team’s credibility.
- Real-Time Note-Taking & Issue Spotting: Develop the skill of noting down not just what is said, but why it’s said — identify legal arguments, tribunal queries, key objections, or procedural directions. Share a concise summary post-hearing for your team — this is often the most appreciated task an intern can perform.
- Professional Demeanour: Dress as though you’re representing the client, even if you’re just in the back row or logged into a virtual platform. Maintain a calm, focused presence. No multitasking, phone use, or off-camera distractions.
Conclusion
Ultimately, technical know-how matters, but what truly sets apart a standout arbitration intern is their attitude, adaptability, and attention to detail. Start early, stay curious, and treat every assignment like a client-facing task.
