London Maritime Arbitrators Association
The London Maritime Arbitrators Association (LMAA) is a maritime arbitration association with headquarters in London, UK.
Abbreviation | LMAA |
---|---|
Formation | 12 February 1960 |
Purpose | Arbitration of maritime disputes |
Location | |
Region served | Global |
Ian Gaunt[1] | |
Website | http://www.lmaa.london/ |
Past presidents
- Malcolm T. Browne (1960–63)
- A.S. Bunker (1963–67)
- R.A.H. Clyde (1967–70)
- J. Chesterman (1970–73)
- Clifford A.L. Clark, M.C. (1973 - 75 & 1980 - 83)
- Cedric Barclay (1975–77)
- Ralph E. Kingsley (1977–78)
- Reginald O. Bishop (1978–79)
- Albert E. Morris, M.B.E. (1979–80)
- The Hon. Michael B. Summerskill (1983–85)
- Gerald Geddes (1985–87)
- Harold J. Miller (1987–89)
- Alec J. Kazantzis (1989–91)
- Bruce Harris (1991–93)
- Michael Ferryman (1993–95)
- Michael Baskerville (1995–97)
- Patrick O’Donovan (1997–99)
- Mark Hamsher (1999–2001)
- Christopher J.W. Moss (2001–03)
- Michael Baker-Harber (2003–06)
- Robert Gaisford (2006–08)
- John Tsatsas (2008 – 11)
- Christopher Fyans (2011 - 14)
- Clive Aston (2014 - 17)
gollark: Anyway, Nim:- is reasonably fast (even if certain libraries are beelike)- has nice syntax- has decent library existence- is able to bind to C stuff, which I have actually used in this because cmark-gfm is very fast- is fairly pleasant to write- has cool metaprogramming- has a compiler which mostly runs bearably fastthus I am using it.
gollark: `openring`, that is, which generates the "from other blogs" bit on my website.
gollark: Also, in the past I had to write about three lines of code to make a Go project faster, because despite Go's main thing being parallelism the authors did not bother to parallelize it despite it being trivially possible to do so.
gollark: Well, in my foolish youth I actually did use it a decent bit. I also used Apple products and was excited about Windows 10, so something.
gollark: LIES!
See also
References
External links
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