Thursday, January 29, 2026 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Charles “Chip” Brower II, Distinguished Service Professor and Foster Family Research Scholar at Wayne State University Law School, has been awarded the 2024 Smit-Lowenfeld Prize, one of the most prestigious honors in the field of international arbitration. Brower is the first scholar ever to receive the prize twice, having previously earned the distinction in 2012.
Presented annually by the International Arbitration Club of New York, the Smit-Lowenfeld Prize recognizes the year’s most outstanding article on international arbitration. Brower’s winning article, “Neglected, Perplexing, Unpredictable: Remedies in International Commercial Arbitration” (102 Neb. L. Rev. 485 (2024)), offers a groundbreaking analysis of one of arbitration’s most overlooked yet critical topics: remedies.
Brower’s research underscores a striking reality; despite their centrality, remedies remain understudied, inconsistently analyzed, and unpredictable in arbitral practice. Brower’s work confronts this gap head-on through a comprehensive review of existing scholarship and a new framework designed to increase clarity and predictability for tribunals and parties alike.
The Smit-Lowenfeld Prize jury, chaired by Thomas ("Ted") Lynch of Jones Day and including several other Club members selects the winning article through a rigorous, multi-stage review, evaluating submissions for originality, analytical rigor, writing quality, and significance to the field. Articles are blind-reviewed, and no weight is given to an author’s reputation or publication venue. Recipients receive a $2,500 honorarium presented at a ceremony in New York.