North Carolina\u27s program of court-ordered mediation of general civil cases originated in the advocacy of attorneys, including those interested in the private practice of mediation. The state court system sponsored the program by certifying mediators, issuing procedural rules, and ordering cases to mediate. The goals of the program were to make litigation more efficient, less costly, and more satisfying to litigants. A controlled study of the North Carolina program indicates that although it shortened case-processing time, it did not reduce the trial rate or litigants\u27 legal fees. Most cases that settled in mediation probably would have settled conventionally without mediation. While most participating litigants liked their experience ...
The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...
While mediation is often thought to decrease trial rates, reduce costs to courts and litigants, spee...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Court-connected mediation programs have produced important benefits for parties, practitioners, cour...
Explores the extent to which lawyers\u27 attitudes and practices have changed with the growth of med...
Mediation confidentiality provisions or privileges are now prevalent throughout the United States. F...
Project submitted in partial fulfillment of the post graduate degree of LLMCommercial litigation is ...
The practice of mediation has gone through enormous change in the last twenty-five years. No longer ...
The past two decades have seen a rapid increase in public interest litigation. However, in a time of...
The judiciary, which once viewed private adjudication as an infringement on the jurisdiction of the ...
Virtually all societies have developed non-adjudicative methods to resolve disputes. Third party int...
Evidence from a multitude of jurisdictions suggests that when mediation is used, often the process i...
In Georgia, the existence and strengthening of two important legal institutions - court settlement a...
The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...
While mediation is often thought to decrease trial rates, reduce costs to courts and litigants, spee...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Court-connected mediation programs have produced important benefits for parties, practitioners, cour...
Explores the extent to which lawyers\u27 attitudes and practices have changed with the growth of med...
Mediation confidentiality provisions or privileges are now prevalent throughout the United States. F...
Project submitted in partial fulfillment of the post graduate degree of LLMCommercial litigation is ...
The practice of mediation has gone through enormous change in the last twenty-five years. No longer ...
The past two decades have seen a rapid increase in public interest litigation. However, in a time of...
The judiciary, which once viewed private adjudication as an infringement on the jurisdiction of the ...
Virtually all societies have developed non-adjudicative methods to resolve disputes. Third party int...
Evidence from a multitude of jurisdictions suggests that when mediation is used, often the process i...
In Georgia, the existence and strengthening of two important legal institutions - court settlement a...
The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...