Profile: Jeremy JO Harwood

Jeremy JO Harwood Law Firm: Blank Rome LLP
Office: Blank Rome LLP
The Chrysler Building
405 Lexington Avenue
10174-0208
City: New York
State: New York
Country: USA
Tel: +1 212 885 5149
Fax: +1 917 332 3720
Email: jharwood@blankrome.com

Shipping and Maritime

Biography: Shipping & Maritime

Jeremy Harwood spent 19 years at Healy & Bailey LLP before its 2006 merger with Blank Rome. He is a partner in the New York office and admitted in New York, the US Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of England and Wales. He concentrates his practice in international dispute resolution of commercial, insurance, re-insurance and insolvency matters. He is involved in all areas of international arbitration including award enforcement against foreign sovereigns based on alter ego theories. He also sits as an arbitrator on a regular basis. He is attorney of record in numerous reported commercial court decisions and arbitration awards. He has an extensive appellate practice, having argued over a dozen successful US Circuit Court appeals.

He is also an acknowledged expert on the interplay of US bankruptcy law with admiralty issues in maritime bankruptcy cases, on which he has lectured around the world and written many articles. He represents debtors, creditors and creditors' committees in maritime and non-maritime cases, most recently Royal Olympic Cruises, Millennium Seacarriers, Great Western Steamship and Oceantrade Corp.

He is the New York legal correspondent for the Steamship Mutual Underwriting Association (Bermuda) Ltd.

Mr Harwood was educated at Charterhouse School, the University of North Carolina, where he was a Morehead Scholar, and Oxford University. He was called to the English Bar by the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple.

This biography is an extract from The International Who's Who of Shipping & Maritime Lawyers which can be purchased from our bookstore.

Featured Articles

Articles By This Lawyer

The Less Than Almighty Dollar: or Why US Arbitrators Should Consider Awards of Damages in a Foreign Currency

It is said that the general principle in awarding damages for breach of contract is to compensate the injured party for its loss and not for the gain, if any, to the defendant.