During the Military dictatorship in Brazil, he defended persecuted politicians as a lawyer,[4] and later joined the truth commission of the Order of Attorneys of Brazil in São Paulo.[5] After being blackmailed into dropping the defense of defendants during the regime of Ernesto Geisel, Luiz Olavo moved with his wife Marta Rossetti Batista and son Humberto to France in the 1970s, where he developed his doctorate.[6] After returning to Brazil, he resumed his practice as lawyer and was a pioneer in advocating the use of arbitration in the country with research and publications at the University of São Paulo Law School,[7] where he was a professor of international law for three decades.
After being nominated by the President of Brazil in 2001, he became a member of the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization, of which he was president between 2007 and 2008, when he returned to legal and arbitral practice in Brazil at his firm, L.O. Baptista Advogados. In 2015, he left this office and founded Atelier Jurídico, an educational and research think tank, where he worked as arbitrator and legal expert, and the firm Nakagawa Baptista & Baptista, specializing in private law.[8]
Luiz Olavo died in São Paulo (SP, Brazil) on October 18, 2019, at 81 years of age.[9]
Academic career
Luiz Olavo Baptista was one of the Brazilian pioneers in international arbitration and international trade law, worked as professor at universities in Brazil, the United States and France, and was the author of several books.
Luiz Olavo Baptista was recognized as one of the most eminent Brazilian jurists in the field of international and commercial law, as well as one of the most active arbitrators in the country's history, having participated in about 1,400 arbitrations in over 50 years of activity.[6]
He worked in class associations throughout his career, and was elected president of the São Paulo Lawyers' Association (AASP) between 1979 and 1980[19] and the Federal Branch of the Order of Attorneys of Brazil between 1981 and 1983.[20]
In 2001, he was appointed by the Fernando Henrique Cardoso administration to serve as a member of the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization, the first Brazilian to hold such office. He chaired the body for a year in 2007. During his time in court, he judged over important disputes involving the Brazilian government, such as the case of Brazilian cotton and sugar exporters against the US and Europe[21] and a dispute between Embraer and Bombardier, in which Brazil accused Canada of subsidizing its aircraft industry.[22] From 2015 until his death in 2019, he worked as arbitrator, wrote legal opinions and developed research and other projects at the Atelier Jurídico think tank.
^Tribunal Arbitral Ad Hoc Do Mercosul Com Competência Para Decidir a Respeito da Reclamação da República Argentina República Federativa do Brasil, Sobre Subsídios À Produção de Carne de Porco=MERCOSUL. "Laudos" (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved October 22, 2019.