Firstly, you cannot "dispose" a list since it isn't IDisposable, and you can't force it to be collected since that isn't how C# works. Typically you would do nothing here. So when might we need to do anything?
If it is a method variable, and your method is going to exit in a moment, don't do anything: let the GC worry about it at some point after the method has existed.
If it is a field (instance variable), and the object is going to go out of scope in a moment, don't do anything: let the GC worry about it at some point after the instance is unreachable.