UNIDROIT hosts MENA Commercial and Investment Law Symposium

On 3–4 February 2026, UNIDROIT hosted the UNIDROIT Middle East and North Africa Transnational Law Academic Symposium on “Transnational Commercial and Investment Law and Middle East Regional Developments” at its Headquarters in Rome. Its purpose was to canvass the interest and the opportunity of developing a dedicated area of activity in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, promoting economic and social development, trade and investment, peace and prosperity, and mutual understanding of countries in the MENA region and their legal systems.

The Symposium brought together approximately 30 participants, including leading academics and practitioners from across the MENA region, to exchange expertise and perspectives on commercial and investment law in an interactive, workshop-style setting.

The attendees, participating as scholars, were affiliated with a wide range of academic institutions and law firms, including Al-Quds University, Boden Law, DFL Law, Gibson Dunn, Hajji & Associés, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Hebron University, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Law School of Piri Reis University, Matouk Bassiouny and the Faculty of Law of Cairo University, MEF University, Mohammed V University of Rabat, Paris-Panthéon-Assas University, Reichman University, University Hassan II of Casablanca, University of Oran 2, University of Sharjah, University of St Andrews, and Watson Farley & Williams, Aviareto Limited and and ZIG Chain were also represented.

The event was structured as a two-day workshop combining two keynote speeches by Professor Malik R. Dahlan and Professor Stéphane Braconnier, several presentations and designated comments, as well as roundtable and open discussions across a series of thematic sessions. The sessions focused on UNIDROIT instruments and related work areas of particular relevance to the MENA region, encouraging comparative and transnational dialogue.

Areas covered by the Symposium included (1) contracts, with particular emphasis on the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, contract farming, and best practices in enforcement; (2) trade, investment, and economic impacts, including investment contracts, regional trade frameworks, and the economic evaluation of legal reforms; (3) access to credit, covering the implementation of the Cape Town Convention and its Protocols, as well as factoring, warehouse receipts, and agricultural financing; (4) contemporary issues, notably digital assets and the Sharia law, energy, and sustainable finance, examined from a private law perspective; (5) commercial arbitration in the MENA region, focusing on recent developments and transnational perspectives; (6) cultural property; (7) teaching and capacity-building, including the development of course materials for joint or parallel instruction in comparative, transactional, and transnational commercial and investment law.

The Symposium devoted a session to future work and project development, discussing potential next steps such as academic studies and collaborative teaching and research projects, exchange of academic and preparatory materials, creation of best practices and foundational resources, as well as initiatives in comparative and transnational law scholarship, including the development of databases and regional research networks.

In concluding the event, Professor Ignacio Tirado, Secretary General of UNIDROIT, requested Professor Jeffrey Wool, Senior Academic Fellow at UNIDROIT and designated project lead, to continue to advance thinking, and prepare discussion-purpose materials, on the items discussed or deriving from the Symposium – so that future work can be seen and evaluated in concrete terms.

The Programme can be found here.

A summary report of the Symposium will be made available on the UNIDROIT website in the coming days.

Comments are closed.