An Inquiry Into the Challenges Facing Arbitration Practice in the Construction Industry in Uganda a Study of Industry Players in Kampala
Abstract
This study is an inquiry into the challenges facing arbitration practice in the construction
industry in Uganda. Its theme was to determine the extent to which arbitration is used to resolve
construction disputes in the construction industry in Uganda, identify the challenges it faces,
and identify possible strategies to address these challenges when resolving the disputes in
Uganda. The study was executed using the cross-sectional descriptive research design. It then
utilised simple random sampling to formulate the sample population, and relied on primary
data, that was collected using the questionnaires administered to 88 respondents (4 developers,
10 contractors, 70 consultants, and 4 arbitrators) using email and WhatsApp platforms. The
findings demonstrated that after negotiation, Arbitration is the second most successful
alternative dispute resolution method used in the construction with 33% of the disputes
encountered referred to arbitration. The main challenge faced is limited experience by the
participants (arbitrators, party representatives, consultants, and parties to the contract). The
study also identified concerns regarding perceptions of some respondents that were indicated
as challenges. These included partiality of the tribunal, lengthy process, lack of training, lack
of confidence in the proceedings, high-cost implication than earlier anticipated, incompetent
party representatives, the unenforceability of the arbitral award, lack of immunity for the
arbitrators, the ambiguity of the arbitration agreements and unsatisfactory outcomes. The
possible strategies identified for overcoming the challenges include support from the arbitration
institutions and professional bodies in the construction industry, training of arbitrators and
professionals within the industry, cost and time management, support from the courts, training
of practitioners to enlighten them on arbitration, correct interpretation of contract documents,
among others. The study made the following recommendations; professional bodies should
advocate for continuous professional development in the area of arbitration, parties should
strictly follow the procedure of appointment of the tribunal and should perform due diligence
on potential arbitrators, parties should follow the law when it comes to enforcement,
appointment of trained and qualified arbitrators and party representatives, participants should
use standard forms of contracts with clear clauses. The study identified that further research
should be conducted to investigate the effectiveness of quantity surveyors as arbitrators in the
construction industry in Uganda.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: