Carolina Mauro#11207

Carolina Mauro

Carolina Mauro is a dual qualified Italian avvocato and solicitor of England & Wales.

After graduating cum laude at the Faculty of Law at Università degli Studi di Trieste (Italy), she moved to London in 2019 and took an LL.M at Queen Mary University of London, from where she graduated in 2020 with distinction with a dissertation on “Administered Investment Treaty Arbitration along the Belt and Road: Status Quo and Possible Developments”.

Since then, she worked on different roles at the intersection of international arbitration and new technologies, including GDPR related matters. Currently, she is working as Legal Counsel at Permutive, an ad-tech company on a mission to provide a privacy-safe infrastructure for publishers and advertisers.

Since 2020, she is a member of the Executive Board at CyberArb, a multidisciplinary initiative aiming to raise awareness on cybersecurity issues in the field of international arbitration.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2018

Experience

  • Meta (secondment with Vario - Pinsent Masons) (2021 - 2022)
  • Research Assistant for Niccolò Landi (2020 - 2022)
  • Research Assistant for Sophie Nappert (2020 - 2021)

Membership

  • CyberArb
  • SRA Solicitors Register
  • Bar of Udine (Italy)

Qualifications

  • LL.M (2020)
  • LL.M (Italy) (2016)
  • Qualified Lawyer Transfer Scheme (QLTS) (2022)
  • “Avvocato” National Bar Exam (Italy) (2018)

Education

  • LL.M Queen Mary University of London (2020)
  • LL.M Università degli Studi di Trieste (Italy) (2016)

1 Contributions by Carolina Mauro

Arbitrators’ Cybersecurity and Data Protection Checklist: Legal and Technical Guidance, GDPR/NIS 2 Considerations, and Procedural Orders from Pre-Appointment through Evidence, Hearing, Award and Post-Award
CHECKLISTS
Arbitrators’ Cybersecurity and Data Protection Checklist: Legal and Technical Guidance, GDPR/NIS 2 Considerations, and Procedural Orders from Pre-Appointment through Evidence, Hearing, Award and Post-Award
The Checklist seeks to outline the principal actions that arbitrators should consider across the entire course of a proceeding, beginning with appointment and the first procedural order and ending with delivery of the award and completion of their obligations. It offers direction on the types of provisions that may feature in procedural orders addressing data security throughout the duration and lifespan of an arbitration. Please be mindful, in light of the evolving cybersecurity ecosystem and applicable laws and regulations, that this is not an exhaustive catalogue. Rather, the checklist functions as guidance on best practice and clarifies the considerations that may arise at each milestone. Arbitration phase: pre-appointment of the Tribunal Legal Steps Safeguard your digital identity so you are seen as independent and impartial, notwithstanding the difficulties posed by an online presence. Refer to: Checklist for Arbitrators on the Use of Social Media and the Duty of Impartiality—the cybersecurity approach to arbitration. Technical Steps Adopt appropriate cybersecurity practices for everyday use of email accounts, passwords, and online platforms when working with case materials supplied by the arbitral institution, and when communicating with the institution, fellow arbitrators, and the parties...
Arbitration
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