This article is concerned with the recent development of court-connected mediation in the context of ‘simple procedure’ in the Scottish sheriff courts. The article examines the policy drivers behind the recent moves to introduce mediation in Scottish civil courts and provides a detailed discussion of the rules providing for mediation in the new simple procedure in the sheriff courts. The piece then critically analyses the practical roll out of mediation in simple procedure and argues that current practice does not safeguard the crucial aspect of litigants’ informed consent to both participation in mediation and in respect of outcomes brokered within the process. The piece hence argues that a uniform, funded system of referral to mediation n...
The aim of this article is to synthesize the importance of mediation as one of the most used m...
Legal practitioners are considered to be the “gate-keepers” for a significant proportion of the medi...
Although across many jurisdictions, mediation’s origins (in the modern sense at least1) often lay in...
The author is grateful to Abbe Brown, Charlie Irvine, David Parratt and two anonymous reviewers for ...
Civil mediation in Britain has rapidly moved away from being an option, for private choice, to becom...
The use of mediation in England and Wales is nowadays an accepted and common practice within the alt...
This piece examines some of the recent proposals made by the Scottish Parliament Justice Committee o...
Scotland occupies the unique position of being a separate jurisdiction while not, however, a separat...
This article critically analyses the recent proposal to introduce a Mediation (Scotland) Bill. The p...
This article considers the 2009 Scottish Civil Courts Review, popularly known as the 'Gill' Review a...
Considers the prospects for further institutionalisation of mediation within the Scottish civil just...
This article is concerned with the interaction between lawyers and mediation, with a particular focu...
Recent research in different parts of the UK has pointed to growing acceptance of the mediation proc...
The DCA are currently institutionalising the use of mediation as a method of alternative dispute res...
The issue of lawyer resistance to mediation is one which has blighted the process since the early da...
The aim of this article is to synthesize the importance of mediation as one of the most used m...
Legal practitioners are considered to be the “gate-keepers” for a significant proportion of the medi...
Although across many jurisdictions, mediation’s origins (in the modern sense at least1) often lay in...
The author is grateful to Abbe Brown, Charlie Irvine, David Parratt and two anonymous reviewers for ...
Civil mediation in Britain has rapidly moved away from being an option, for private choice, to becom...
The use of mediation in England and Wales is nowadays an accepted and common practice within the alt...
This piece examines some of the recent proposals made by the Scottish Parliament Justice Committee o...
Scotland occupies the unique position of being a separate jurisdiction while not, however, a separat...
This article critically analyses the recent proposal to introduce a Mediation (Scotland) Bill. The p...
This article considers the 2009 Scottish Civil Courts Review, popularly known as the 'Gill' Review a...
Considers the prospects for further institutionalisation of mediation within the Scottish civil just...
This article is concerned with the interaction between lawyers and mediation, with a particular focu...
Recent research in different parts of the UK has pointed to growing acceptance of the mediation proc...
The DCA are currently institutionalising the use of mediation as a method of alternative dispute res...
The issue of lawyer resistance to mediation is one which has blighted the process since the early da...
The aim of this article is to synthesize the importance of mediation as one of the most used m...
Legal practitioners are considered to be the “gate-keepers” for a significant proportion of the medi...
Although across many jurisdictions, mediation’s origins (in the modern sense at least1) often lay in...