UNIDROIT hosts Digital Assets Round Table Experts Series

On 5 December 2025 and 26 January 2026, UNIDROIT hosted two workshops dedicated to the UNIDROIT Principles on Digital Assets and Private Law (DAPL Principles), as part of its ongoing efforts to support the implementation of the instrument.

The events were jointly organised with DARTE (Digital Assets Round Table Experts Series), with the support of the European Commission, and featured expert-level discussions on the challenges of applying private law frameworks to digital assets, with particular emphasis on the solutions proposed in the DAPL Principles. The sessions examined the interaction between the DAPL Principles and civil law, common law, and mixed legal systems, bringing together academics, practitioners, industry experts, and legislative and governmental representatives from a wide range of jurisdictions including, for example, from Croatia, Italy, Romania, Serbia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nigeria, the United States of America, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic. Key topics included proprietary aspects, custody, secured transactions, and linked assets in the context of digital assets.

Rome DARTE 1.0

The Rome DARTE 1.0 session took place on 5 December 2025 at the seat of UNIDROIT, and was held in collaboration with the European Commission and Bybit EU. This edition focused on the application of the DAPL Principles in civil law jurisdictions. The roundtable examined the foundational legal elements of the digital-asset ecosystem, particularly in light of the DAPL Principles and the implementation of the Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 on markets in crypto-assets (MiCAR).

 

The session opened with a keynote address by Professor Ignacio Tirado, Secretary-General of UNIDROIT, who stressed the importance of enabling digital assets to be the subject of proprietary rights and providing clear rules when they are the object of transfer. Mr Georg Harer (Bybit EU) explored the industry challenges in light of the fragmented private law rules governing crypto-asset ownership and transfer. Mr
Tomáš Kozárek (Ministry of Industry and Trade, Czech Republic) followed with an examination of the legal implications of the concept of “control” in civil law jurisdictions. Finally, Ms Tecla Rodi (Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance) presented Italy’s Fintech Decree as a case study, discussing how the DAPL Principles are applied to financial instruments. The session concluded with a keynote speech by Dr. Joachim Schwerin (European Commission).

Rome DARTE 2.0

The second session, Rome DARTE 2.0, took place on 26 January 2026 and focused on common law and mixed legal systems. It opened with welcome remarks by Professor Ignacio Tirado, Secretary-General of UNIDROIT, followed by an introduction to the DAPL Principles and the DARTE concept by Dr Nina-Luisa Siedler (Siedler Legal). The programme featured presentations by Professor Louise Gullifer (University of Cambridge) on making security interests in digital assets effective against third parties, particularly from a UK perspective, and a keynote address by Dr Joachim Schwerin (European Commission). Mr Olayimika Oyebanji Jibril (BlockLaw Consulting) discussed the challenges arising in the context of cross-border insolvency and the protection of Nigerian digital asset creditors, while Professor Charles W. Mooney, Jr. (University of Pennsylvania) focused on proprietary rights in digital assets and linked assets.

Overall, the discussions at the two workshops reaffirmed the central role of private law in ensuring legal certainty and highlighted the importance of both soft-law and hard-law instruments in supporting innovation while ensuring predictability in market transactions.

Additional information and the event reports are available at:
https://www.blackvogel.com/roundtables-darte

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