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Institution: The Hague University of Applied Sciences - International & European Law Programme

Period of stay: September-December 2025

Contact: a.malliaropoulou@hhs.nl

https://www.linkedin.com/in/artemismalliaropoulou/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profile: 

Education: LL.B. (University of Athens), LL.M. (London School of Economics), Ph.D. (University of Athens), RS (University of Oxford), VS (Columbia University and Cornell University), GDL (BPP University).

Work experience:
Current role: Assistant Professor (Docent) at the Hague University of Applied Sciences - International & European Law Programme and legal advisor (admitted to practise law in Greece since 2010 and in England & Wales since 2023).

Past work experience:
United Nations Office of Legal Affairs (New York), Council of the EU – Legal Service (Brussels), International Criminal Court (the Hague), Unidroit Institute (Rome), British Institute for International and Comparative Law (London), Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP (London), Shearman & Sterling LLP (Paris), Allen & Overy LLP (Paris), Lazaratos & Partners LLP (Athens), United Nations Development Program (Athens & Bratislava), World Trade Institute (Bern).

Research Area:

International arbitration, constitutional law, art and cultural heritage law, EU law

Research Title:

Constitutional law and arbitration: “a tale of two cities”? A comparative analysis of potential cross-fertilisation between these two distinct and parallel prima facie fields in England and Greece.

Research Outline:

In 1953 Ludwig Wittgenstein pointed out in the context of his famous work Philosophical Investigations that “the problems are solved, not by giving new information, but by arranging what we have known since long.”. The importance of this quote is often underestimated. The right to arbitration has been a fundamental right that is nowadays heavily criticised on the grounds of lack of legitimacy, and potential threat to democracy and the rule of law, while there is a tendency to ignore its constitutional nature and historical roots.
Professor Peter Rutledge's book on Arbitration and the Constitution and Professor Victor Ferreres Comella’s book on The Constitution of Arbitration crystallised my decision to delve into legal research concerning the bond between two strange prima facie bedfellows.
This project of assessing the relationship between arbitration and constitutional law in England and Greece is of practical importance for two reasons: First, no one has addressed the constitutionality of arbitration in a comprehensive and methodical manner in these two countries. Second, it is a timely topic, as arbitration’s legitimacy has been seriously challenged, and there is a plethora of court decisions and arbitral awards that can and should be assessed from a constitutional law perspective.

Publications:

- The principle of legitimate expectations: foundations and balancing criteria according to the case law of the Hellenic Administrative Supreme Court, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights, NB 2014 (monograph).

- European rule of law and arbitration: what standard(s)? (co-authored), Transnational Dispute Management (4) 2023.
- Political risk insurance in international investment arbitration, Jus Mundi Wiki notes, October 2020.
- Case No. 1713/2008 of the Hellenic Supreme Court, Case Law on Uncitral Texts, UN CLOUT Issue 190, 18 June 2018.
- Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Limited v. TANESCO - ICSID Case No. ARB/10/20, Case Report, Transnational Dispute Management - International Arbitration Case Law, 16 January 2018.
- Case No. 366/2016 of the Hellenic Supreme Court, Case Law on Uncitral Texts, UN CLOUT Issue 186, 30 October 2017.
- Gambrinus, Corp. v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela - ICSID Case No. ARB/11/31, Decision on Annulment of the Award, Case Report, Transnational Dispute Management-International Arbitration Case-Law, 3 October 2017.
- Legitimate expectations: a paradigm of Heraclitean hidden harmony?, EFILA blog, 24.11.2016.
- The impact of the European Directive 77/249/EU on legal practice in Prof. K. Gogos, Code of Hellenic Lawyers, NB 2015.
- Shareholders’ property rights and Private Sector Involvement – the route to the ECtHR - Lasciate ogni speranza voi che entrate?, 2015 Theory and Practice of Administrative Law.
- Legitimate expectations vs. protection of the environment: another bras de fer?, 2015 Law & Environment.
- Supremacy of EU law and the Hellenic legal order, Review of European and Administrative Law 2010 WPS.
- Post-Lisbon national parliaments’ voice in the EU law-making process, Orbiter LSE Law SU biannual magazine 2009.
- Non-contractual state liability in damages in the EU, ELSA Selected Papers on European Law 2009.
- Forced expropriation following the 2001 constitutional revision in Greece, Juris Consultus 2008.

 

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