Max Bonnell


Maxwell Thomas Bennett Bonnell is an Australian lawyer and cricket historian.

Career

Max Bonnell attended Trinity Grammar School in Sydney before studying Arts and Law at the University of Sydney. He also studied at the University of Warwick where he completed a Masters degree in European Renaissance Drama.
He is a lawyer specialising in international arbitration. He was a partner in the Sydney office of the law firm King & Wood Mallesons for 18 years until he joined White & Case in 2017. In 2019 he joined the Sydney firm Henry William Lawyers. At the 2016 Australian ADR Awards, he was named International ADR Practitioner of the Year. He has acted as an Australian delegate to the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law. He was counsel for the successful claimant in White Industries v India, the first successful ISDS claim made against India.
He is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators and a Fellow of the Australian Centre for International Commercial Arbitration. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Sydney. In 2020, he became one of the first arbitrators included in the Arbitrator Pool of the Court of Arbitration for Art.
Alongside his legal career he has been a prolific biographer of cricketers since he published Currency Lads in 2001, concentrating on Australian cricketers in the period between the mid-19th century and World War Two. He has twice received the Jack Pollard Trophy, awarded for the best Australian book on cricket each year. He has also written a biography of John Walpole Willis, a 19th-century judge in New South Wales, as well as numerous articles for law journals.
He played club cricket for Stourbridge in the Birmingham and District Premier League and for Western Suburbs and Sydney University in Sydney Grade Cricket. He served as Chairman of the Board of the Sydney University Cricket Club. He was awarded a University Gold for cricket by Sydney Uni Sport and Fitness in 2017 and is a Life Member of the Sydney Cricket Association.

Books

He has also contributed chapters to the books Australia: Sort of a Cricket Country and Rock Country.