How Litigation Funding Is Reshaping ADR Strategy in the MENA Region

Alternative Dispute Resolution has long been promoted as a more efficient and commercially sensible alternative to court litigation. Arbitration and mediation, in particular, have been central to this promise, offering confidentiality, procedural flexibility, and cross-border enforceability. In practice, however, modern ADR—especially international commercial arbitration—has evolved into a highly capital-intensive process. Tribunal fees, institutional costs, expert evidence, legal representation, and enforcement planning have collectively transformed arbitration into a sophisticated financial undertaking. As a result, access to ADR in high-value disputes is increasingly determined not only by legal merit, but by financial capacity. This shift has placed litigation funding at the centre of modern ADR strategy across the MENA region.
Litigation funding, when applied to ADR, operates as a risk-allocation mechanism rather than a mere source of financing. Funders provide capital on a non-recourse basis, absorbing the downside risk of failure in exchange for a share of successful recoveries. This structure fundamentally alters how arbitration and mediation are approached. Claims are no longer pursued solely because they are legally sound; they are pursued because they are commercially viable when assessed through lenses of duration, enforceability, and recovery probability. As a result, litigation funding has begun to influence not only who can access ADR, but how disputes are selected, structured, and resolved.
In arbitration, the influence of litigation funding is particularly pronounced. Before committing capital, funders conduct extensive due diligence that often exceeds the depth of analysis undertaken by claimants themselves. This process typically examines the applicable arbitration rules, the seat of arbitration, the enforceability of potential awards, the solvency and asset profile of the respondent, and the likely duration of proceedings. By introducing this external discipline, funding reshapes arbitration strategy from the outset. Weak or speculative claims are filtered out early, while viable disputes are structured with enforcement and settlement dynamics in mind. In many cases, the presence of funding also acts as a market signal, indicating that an independent financial actor has assessed the dispute as commercially credible, which can materially influence negotiation and settlement behaviour.
Mediation, although traditionally less expensive than arbitration, is also increasingly affected by funding dynamics in the MENA region. In complex, multi-party, or high-value disputes, even mediation can impose significant costs and strategic risk. Funded mediation allows parties to engage in settlement discussions without the pressure of sunk costs or liquidity constraints. More recently, innovative funding models have emerged that support the resolution process itself rather than one adversarial position. These structures are designed to align incentives toward early settlement, reduce escalation, and preserve long-term commercial relationships—an outcome particularly relevant in construction, infrastructure, and joint-venture disputes that dominate regional caseloads.
The impact of litigation funding on ADR strategy is especially visible in the Gulf region, where institutional frameworks have matured rapidly. The UAE, in particular, has positioned itself as a regional hub for arbitration funding through the regulatory clarity offered by the Dubai International Financial Centre and the Abu Dhabi Global Market. Both jurisdictions expressly recognise and regulate third-party funding arrangements, imposing disclosure obligations and safeguards designed to preserve tribunal independence and procedural integrity. This clarity has fostered confidence among funders, parties, and tribunals alike, making funded arbitration a predictable and accepted feature of dispute resolution within these frameworks.
By contrast, other jurisdictions in the region have adopted a more incremental approach. In Saudi Arabia, litigation funding is not comprehensively regulated, but is increasingly assessed through principles of contract law and arbitration practice. While this has not prevented funding activity, it places greater emphasis on careful drafting, Sharia considerations, and enforcement planning. The divergence between structured and evolving regulatory environments has had a strategic effect on ADR planning, with parties increasingly selecting seats and institutional frameworks that provide certainty not only in procedure, but in the treatment of funding arrangements.
Beyond access to capital, the integration of litigation funding into ADR has broader systemic implications. It encourages early realism by forcing parties to confront enforcement risk and duration uncertainty at the outset of a dispute. It shifts focus away from nominal claim value toward economically recoverable outcomes. It also contributes to efficiency by discouraging claims that lack commercial substance, thereby reducing congestion and strategic misuse of arbitration mechanisms. In this sense, funding does not distort ADR; it reinforces its original purpose by aligning dispute resolution with rational economic behaviour.
At the same time, the growing role of litigation funding raises important governance and ethical considerations. Transparency, conflicts of interest, and tribunal independence remain central concerns, particularly in arbitration. The regulatory approaches adopted in jurisdictions such as the DIFC and ADGM reflect a recognition that funding must be integrated into ADR frameworks in a way that preserves fairness and legitimacy. Properly regulated, funding strengthens confidence in ADR rather than undermining it, ensuring that disputes are pursued with discipline, accountability, and strategic coherence.
Looking ahead, the relationship between ADR and litigation funding in the MENA region is likely to deepen. As disputes become more complex, capital-intensive, and cross-border in nature, parties will continue to evaluate arbitration and mediation through financial and risk-management lenses. In this environment, litigation funding is no longer a peripheral consideration. It is actively reshaping how ADR is used, how disputes are priced, and how outcomes are pursued. In the MENA region, where institutional frameworks are evolving and enforcement certainty remains paramount, litigation funding is not merely supporting ADR—it is redefining its strategic role within modern dispute resolution.
Selected Resources
- Dubai International Financial Centre – Arbitration Law and Practice Directions on Third-Party Funding
- Abu Dhabi Global Market – Arbitration Regulations and Litigation Funding Framework
- International Chamber of Commerce – ICC Arbitration Rules and Practice Notes
- London Court of International Arbitration – LCIA Guidance on Third-Party Funding
- OECD, Third-Party Litigation Funding and Access to Justice
- Queen Mary University of London, International Arbitration Survey
- ICCA-Queen Mary Task Force on Third-Party Funding in International Arbitration
