Militarized conflict is one of the most devastating of all human activities. The international community’s response to conflict occurrence can significantly affect the number of casualties, the extent of resulting devastation and even the outcome of the conflict. State responses range from conflict management, whereby third parties actively engage in resolving the conflict; joining, whereby states become an additional disputant; or remaining uninvolved. One of the most common active third-party responses is to act as a mediator, a role using consensual, nonbinding and nonviolent means of conflict management and resolution. This paper explores the policy of state-led mediation, its strengths and weaknesses, and where and how it can be en...
© 2011 Dr. Aran MartinThis thesis examines the issue of third party intervention in regional intrast...
The incidence of violent conflict between States poses the gravest threat to the stability and well-...
This paper examines if, when, and how states act to manage militarized disputes. I argue that the re...
Mediation is now the most popular form of conflict management, and it has proven to be an effective ...
This article looks at the various contributions to this issue of the Penn State Journal of Law & Int...
Mediation, or the intervention of third parties, has been a tested and tried means of dispute resolu...
While arbitration remains more common than mediation as an alternative to litigation in domestic leg...
This project investigates states' strategies in the management of contentious interstate disputes as...
This dissertation focuses on the effects of a third-party mediator in protracted conflict settings. ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The presented article is aimed at reflecting usage of mediation as a form of international conflicts...
The conditions under which negotiation or mediation are chosen in international conflict have been l...
When multiple third-parties (states, coalitions, and international organizations) intervene in the s...
In international dispute mediation, a one-size-fits-all view of mediation may actually inhibit effec...
Studies on international mediation have traditionally focused on the effectiveness of international ...
© 2011 Dr. Aran MartinThis thesis examines the issue of third party intervention in regional intrast...
The incidence of violent conflict between States poses the gravest threat to the stability and well-...
This paper examines if, when, and how states act to manage militarized disputes. I argue that the re...
Mediation is now the most popular form of conflict management, and it has proven to be an effective ...
This article looks at the various contributions to this issue of the Penn State Journal of Law & Int...
Mediation, or the intervention of third parties, has been a tested and tried means of dispute resolu...
While arbitration remains more common than mediation as an alternative to litigation in domestic leg...
This project investigates states' strategies in the management of contentious interstate disputes as...
This dissertation focuses on the effects of a third-party mediator in protracted conflict settings. ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The presented article is aimed at reflecting usage of mediation as a form of international conflicts...
The conditions under which negotiation or mediation are chosen in international conflict have been l...
When multiple third-parties (states, coalitions, and international organizations) intervene in the s...
In international dispute mediation, a one-size-fits-all view of mediation may actually inhibit effec...
Studies on international mediation have traditionally focused on the effectiveness of international ...
© 2011 Dr. Aran MartinThis thesis examines the issue of third party intervention in regional intrast...
The incidence of violent conflict between States poses the gravest threat to the stability and well-...
This paper examines if, when, and how states act to manage militarized disputes. I argue that the re...