Conference programme
Conference homeSearch programme
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1200)
Session details
All Division members are encouraged to attend this meeting and are invited to put to the Officers any questions they may have, relevant to the work of the Division.
Announcement: Legal Practice Division General Meeting Agenda, Thursday 08 October 2026, Copenhagen, Denmark.
In accordance with the Legal Practice Division (LPD) By-Laws, Article 7.3 this serves as notice of the LPD General Meeting that will take place on Thursday 8 October at the time of the IBA 2026 Annual Conference in Copenhagen. This meeting will elect the Principal Officers and Council members of the Division. All Legal Practice Division members are eligible to attend the meeting.
The Agenda for the meeting announcing the Officers to be elected will be circulated nearer the Conference.
Legal Practice Division (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
AI and digital technologies are dismantling traditional barriers of cross-border legal practice and increasingly lawyers are accessing tools that were once the preserve of large international players to research foreign markets, identify and serve clients across multiple jurisdictions and compete globally.
But these opportunities come with serious risks. Unregulated and unqualified providers are entering the market with little accountability, raising urgent concerns around the disclosure of confidential material and the integrity of legal advice. For qualified practitioners, the risks include deskilling, over-reliance on AI outputs, inadvertent breach of local regulation, loss of the trust of the judiciary and the erosion of the independent judgment that defines good lawyering.
This session explores how digital innovation is transforming the relationship between lawyer and client across borders and the nature, scope, and flow of legal services worldwide.
BIC International Trade in Legal Services Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
Ensuring safety and quality in compounded pharmaceuticals, addressing industry challenges, and discussing measures to combat counterfeit drugs.
Criminal Law Committee
Healthcare and Life Sciences Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
Family businesses are confronted with unique governance considerations. For example, these businesses may need to address conflicts at the intersection of family dynamics and fiduciary duties, which can pit personal relationships or loyalties against legal obligations. These conflicts may be further shaped by family estate planning arrangements, including wills, or complicated by the existence of outside investors. Family businesses also need to approach exits in a way that is sensitive to family legacy, succession planning and other factors. This panel will compare legal doctrines and toolkits, such as family constitutions, and translate them into real-world playbooks for resolving disputes and averting deadlock. The panel will also examine structures that can promote smooth exits and successions, including calibrated buy-sell mechanics, put/call options and staged liquidity.
Closely Held Companies Committee (Lead)
Family Law Committee
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
As global energy markets face increasing disruption, the oil & gas and maritime sectors are navigating a shared landscape of geopolitical risk, price volatility, and regulatory uncertainty. From strained supply chains and rising freight costs to the impact of sanctions and chokepoint disruptions, energy security has become a critical concern for both industries.
At the same time, the push toward net-zero is reshaping fuel supply, investment decisions, and operational models, often creating tension between long-term sustainability goals and the immediate need for reliable and affordable energy.
This session will examine the common legal and commercial challenges facing both sectors, including supply instability, fluctuating energy prices, evolving bunkering risks, and fragmented regulatory frameworks. It will also explore how closer alignment, through coordinated contracting, infrastructure planning, and risk-sharing mechanisms can enhance resilience and support a more stable energy environment.
Bringing together perspectives from across the energy and maritime value chain, the discussion will focus on practical solutions to ensure that energy security, commercial viability, and decarbonisation can progress hand in hand in an increasingly uncertain global environment.
Maritime and Transport Law Committee
Oil and Gas Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
Many hospitality parties operate in multiple jurisdictions where they have established relationships with their legal counsel. When venturing into new jurisdictions for the first time, this established legal support is absent. This panel, featuring several general counsels from the hospitality, leisure, and gaming sectors, will discuss how they search for and select new legal counsel in these jurisdictions to meet their specific needs.
The discussion will also explore how AI affects counsel selection: does it empower general counsel with greater flexibility in hiring decisions by serving as an independent check on counsel?
Law Firm Management Committee
Leisure Industries Section (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
This panel will explore how privacy regulations, cybersecurity standards and financial rules interact within digital transaction ecosystems. By 2026, the rollout of Europe’s EU Digital Identity (EUDI) Wallet under the eIDAS 2.0 framework will transform how individuals prove identity and how financial and digital services verify and protect it. As these trusted identity systems merge with payment infrastructures, new intersections arise between cybersecurity, privacy, and financial regulation and new questions emerge about who is responsible when things go wrong.
One part of the discussion will examine how cybersecurity, privacy, and financial liability frameworks intersect in the four-party model, and the other will dive into the new regulatory and business realities of biometric identity in the wallet era. Together, the session will lay out how responsibility is distributed in case of data misuse, security breaches, or systemic failures, and how biometric-based identity proofs introduce new layers of both opportunity and risk.
Panellists will explore:
· how the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), NIS2 Directive, and Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) interact with eIDAS 2.0 and wallet-based identity systems;
· lawful bases and compliance design for biometric processing and selective disclosure of attributes;
· the allocation of liability and trust among issuers, relying parties and technology providers; and
· how digital identities enable passwordless access, reduce fraud and transform onboarding.
Bringing together regulators, policymakers and industry leaders, this session will bridge financial regulation and digital identity innovation, highlighting both regulatory gaps and emerging business opportunities in the future of secure digital transactions.
Banking & Financial Law Committee
Technology Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
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This session will explore dealing with the challenges of an (un)insured world.
International Construction Projects Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
This panel will examine recent developments in the sphere of investment arbitration and treaty practice.
Arbitration Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
This session will consider strategies to contend with these issues in conflict-affected countries and countries highly penetrated by organised crime.
Mining Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
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Over the past five years, ESG has shifted from theory to a core strategic and reputational concern for law firms, moving beyond client advice to impact firm operations, culture, and values. Today, firms are judged by a wider group of stakeholders, including clients, talent, regulators, and society. This session will focus on how firms are embedding ESG – covering climate, human rights, DEI, and ethical governance – into strategy and decision-making. With rising scrutiny, political pushback, and evolving expectations, law firms face new challenges and opportunities as they navigate what responsible business really means. Bringing together diverse perspectives, the session will ask: is ESG in law firms maturing or fragmenting? And how can firms show genuine leadership and impact in a fast-changing landscape?
ESG Subcommittee
IBA Legal Policy & Research Unit
Law Firm Management Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
This session will compare the US ESTA, the EU’s ETIAS, and the UK ETA systems – examining their scope, implementation challenges, and interoperability. It will explore legal, privacy, and human rights concerns associated with data collection, risk scoring, and algorithmic decision-making in traveller screening. Finally, it will discuss the impact on mobility, visa-free travel, and global business travellers of the implementation of these programmes in the EU, UK, US and several other countries.
Immigration and Nationality Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
New technologies and highly mobile workforces are reshaping the way business is conducted worldwide, both in terms of how goods and services are delivered to consumers and how entities within a multinational group interact and share resources. This panel will discuss some of the emerging income tax, transfer pricing, and withholding tax issues that arise as a result.
Taxes Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1115 - 1230)
Session details
This session will examine the role of whistleblower reports in litigation, exploring the legal obligations, ethical considerations and strategic challenges they present. Participants will gain practical guidance on managing disclosures effectively while protecting both organisational interests and whistleblowers’ rights.
Anti-Corruption Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1130 - 1230)
Session details
Join us for our open committee business meeting where all members and Officers are invited to learn more about the current and upcoming activities and developments of the Committee.
Women Lawyers' Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1230 - 1330)
Session details
Join us for our open committee business meeting where all members and Officers are invited to learn more about the current and upcoming activities and developments of the committee.
Immigration and Nationality Law Committee (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1245 - 1330)
Session details
Conference attendees are invited to participate in this general meeting of the IBAHRI. During the meeting, IBAHRI Director Baroness Kennedy and IBAHRI Co-Chairs Hina Jilani and Mark Stephens CBE will discuss IBAHRI’s programmes and topical issues regarding human rights today. The discussion will be open to questions and suggestions related to the past, present and future work of the IBAHRI.
IBA's Human Rights Institute (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1245 - 1415)
African Regional Forum (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1245 - 1415)
Section on Public and Professional Interest (Lead)
Thursday 8 October (1430 - 1545)
Real Estate Section (Lead)