Advanced Arbitration Program
Professional Global for Managing Educational Projects announces the launch of An advanced program in arbitration, claims, and dispute management in construction and investment projects.
The instructor of this program is a financial claims specialist who worked with different international organizations.
The program is accredited by the Global Council for Law, Arbitration and Intellectual Property (GCLA)
Program Outcomes
You will receive a local certificate issued by the instructor, an arbitrator certified by the Palestinian Ministry of Justice, explaining the practical part of the program.
You can become internationally accredited by the Global Council for Law, Arbitration, and Intellectual Property (GCLA) in Washington.
By the end of this program, you can advance to a group of more specialized programs that enables you to become a certified arbitrator in arbitration, claims, and disputes.
You can become internationally accredited by the Global Council for Law, Arbitration, and Intellectual Property (GCLA) in Washington.
By the end of this program, you can advance to a group of more specialized programs that enables you to become a certified arbitrator in arbitration, claims, and disputes.
Program Objectives
- Have an advanced understanding of arbitration, contracts, and their advantages and disadvantage.
- Develop your skills in editing and managing contracts and defining the commitments of each contract’s stakeholders.
- Open new opportunities in your field.
- Have a comprehensive understanding of claims.
- Know the reasons that lead to claims.
- Understand how to calculate claims.
- Know the process of claim request.
Program Target Audience
- Individuals responsible for claim requests.
- Engineers.
- Arbitrators.
- Contractors.
- Material suppliers.
- Investors.
- Project supervisors.
Program Content
- Session 1 covers a general review of arbitration procedures, the concept of claim, when to request claims, and the conditions that allow claims requests such as mandatory delay, receiving change requests, core changes in quantities or quality, omitting a core part of the project, or the change in a project time frame.
- Session 2 covers claim request procedures before or during project execution or at the project termination or completion.
- Session 3 covers explaining the different types of project delays, this can include a delay caused by one of the contracting sides, a delay caused by a third party, a delay with or without accepted reasons, synchronous or asynchronous delays, which side is responsible for the delay. This session will also cover the different types of claims, like direct, indirect, payment change, or core delays.
- Session 4 covers claims reasons, like project termination, unclear tender documents, conflict of information in tender documents, design mistakes, contradictions between the initial tests and the actual situation, or any forced circumstances.
- Session 5 covers claim request procedures, such as defining claim type, reason, analysis, impacts, costs, preparation, submission, and negotiation to resolve the dispute related to the claim.
By the end of the final session, participants will train on a real-world example of claims, dispute management, and a mock court.