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IJC
International Jurisdictions Council
Practice Domains
Practice Domains

Five domains.
One standard.
No gradations.

International Jurisdictions Council designates one Constituent Law Practice per domain per jurisdiction. These are not categories for marketing. They are the structural reality of how cross-border legal practice organises itself — and where execution continuity must be preserved.

Framework

Departments, not chapters.

Each domain functions as a department, not a chapter. IJC appoints domain leads — practices with genuine on-ground execution intelligence — not contributors to a directory. The five domains reflect the fastest-growing and most structurally significant areas of cross-border legal practice today.

The prior classification has been retired. Arbitration and litigation competed for the same designation pathway. Two of the fastest-growing cross-border practice areas — real assets & energy, and technology & IP — were absent entirely. The new five-domain model corrects both failures.

The Five Domains

One designated practice.
Per domain. Per jurisdiction.

Domain I

Corporate, Finance & Capital

Cross-border transactions, capital structures, M&A, private equity, joint ventures, and the legal architecture of international business formation and restructuring. The domain where strategic decisions harden into enforceable form.

M&A Private Equity Capital Markets Restructuring Joint Ventures
Domain II

Dispute Resolution & Enforcement

International arbitration, cross-border litigation, mediation, and the enforceability of awards and judgments. Distinct from corporate advisory — this domain carries the reality of what happens when agreements fail and borders become obstacles.

International Arbitration Cross-Border Litigation Award Enforcement Mediation
Domain III

Regulatory, Tax & Compliance

Regulatory posture, tax structuring, AML and sanctions compliance, licensing, and the management of institutional risk where legal obligations shift faster than organisations can adapt. The domain of structural exposure before it becomes a dispute.

Regulatory Risk Tax Structuring Sanctions AML / KYC Licensing
Domain IV

Real Assets, Infrastructure & Energy New

Real estate, infrastructure development, energy projects, and natural resources — where capital commitments are large, jurisdictional complexity is acute, and the interaction between local law and international investment structures is consequential.

Real Estate Infrastructure Energy & Resources Project Finance Investment Structures
Domain V

Technology, IP & Data New

Intellectual property, data protection, platform regulation, AI governance, technology transactions, and cross-border data flows. The domain where the gap between written law and enforcement reality is widest, most varied, and most consequential — and where genuine jurisdictional intelligence matters most. A domain that requires real on-ground knowledge, not generic compliance frameworks.

IP & Licensing Data Protection AI Governance Platform Regulation Tech Transactions Cross-Border Data
Designation Framework

One designated practice.
No tiers. No gradations.

One designated practice.
Per domain.
Per jurisdiction.

No tiers · No gradations · No proxies
Submit Request for Consideration →

Designation is not membership, promotion, or endorsement. It is an institutional recognition of execution-ground responsibility, continuity of practice, professional standing, and alignment with IJC's institutional principles.

A practice is either designated or it is not. There are no tiers, no upgraded listings, no premium visibility, and no referral or mandate arrangements of any kind.

Where a jurisdiction carries an open domain, IJC maintains no designated presence in that domain for that jurisdiction. The institution does not fill gaps with proxies. Designation occurs only where alignment can be preserved.

Multi-domain designation is considered where a single practice carries genuine execution depth across more than one domain — assessed independently, without altering the one-per-domain standard within a jurisdiction.

Key Facts

Domains at a glance.

5
Practice Domains
Corporate · Disputes · Regulatory · Real Assets · Tech & IP
1
Per Domain Per Jurisdiction
One designated practice only — no tiers, no gradations
80+
Jurisdictions
Global coverage across five major regions
2026
Inaugural Assembly
Barcelona, 14–15 August 2026
Designation Model
One Constituent Law Practice per domain per jurisdiction. Scarcity as architectural principle, not marketing policy.
Domain Evolution
Five-domain model introduced 2026 — replaces prior classification, adds Real Assets & Energy and Technology, IP & Data.
Domain Designation Criteria
Designation requires demonstrated execution-ground responsibility, continuity of practice across at least three years, professional standing within jurisdiction, and alignment with IJC's institutional principles. Practices are assessed by domain independently. Designation carries no commercial arrangement, referral obligations, or preferential treatment of any kind.