The Alternative Dispute Resolution (“ADR”) movement has garnished much debate with scholars arguing on both sides—for or against—its further implementation into our adversarial system. This Article critiques the arguments against the movement focusing on Professor Owen Fiss’ work. From a theological reconciliation point of view, the Authors argue in favor of its further implementation because the ADR system promotes justice, community values, and the reconciliation of problems rather than resolution
In the essay that follows, I advocate for greater acceptance of the diversity of belief and practice...
As the processes comprising, alternative, or as we now say, appropriate dispute resolution mature ...
The rule of law is predicated on the rights of citizens to choose their dispute resolution forum and...
The Alternative Dispute Resolution (“ADR”) movement has garnished much debate with scholars arguing ...
ADR, the acronym that identifies the alternative dispute resolution movement, derives its current po...
Religion can inspire. It can also distort, and this is precisely what it does for Professors McTheni...
Critics of Owen Fiss’s famous 1984 Against Settlement widely assumed that he indicted alternative di...
This article joins an important conversation about the proper role of alternative dispute resolution...
Twenty-seven years ago, Professor Frank Sander urged American lawyers and judges to re-imagine the c...
In a recent report to the Harvard Overseers, Derek Bok called for a new direction in legal education...
In less than a decade, alternative dispute resolution- ADR-has grown from a bravely-voiced hope to a...
This research project examines Alternative Dispute Resolution; the most frequently used alternative ...
The 1990s may be the decade in which the courts bring alternative dispute resolution in house. Pro...
Years ago, I published Fairness and Formality: Minimizing the Risk of Prejudice in Alternative Dispu...
By the time Professor Richard Delgado and his colleagues wrote their seminal article on the risk of ...
In the essay that follows, I advocate for greater acceptance of the diversity of belief and practice...
As the processes comprising, alternative, or as we now say, appropriate dispute resolution mature ...
The rule of law is predicated on the rights of citizens to choose their dispute resolution forum and...
The Alternative Dispute Resolution (“ADR”) movement has garnished much debate with scholars arguing ...
ADR, the acronym that identifies the alternative dispute resolution movement, derives its current po...
Religion can inspire. It can also distort, and this is precisely what it does for Professors McTheni...
Critics of Owen Fiss’s famous 1984 Against Settlement widely assumed that he indicted alternative di...
This article joins an important conversation about the proper role of alternative dispute resolution...
Twenty-seven years ago, Professor Frank Sander urged American lawyers and judges to re-imagine the c...
In a recent report to the Harvard Overseers, Derek Bok called for a new direction in legal education...
In less than a decade, alternative dispute resolution- ADR-has grown from a bravely-voiced hope to a...
This research project examines Alternative Dispute Resolution; the most frequently used alternative ...
The 1990s may be the decade in which the courts bring alternative dispute resolution in house. Pro...
Years ago, I published Fairness and Formality: Minimizing the Risk of Prejudice in Alternative Dispu...
By the time Professor Richard Delgado and his colleagues wrote their seminal article on the risk of ...
In the essay that follows, I advocate for greater acceptance of the diversity of belief and practice...
As the processes comprising, alternative, or as we now say, appropriate dispute resolution mature ...
The rule of law is predicated on the rights of citizens to choose their dispute resolution forum and...