When mediation places decision-making power in the hands of lay disputants it raises troubling issues. Can justice be delivered without judicial assistance? What is the effect on the legal system? And how should outcomes thus achieved be regarded? Critics have tended to answer negatively, pointing to a range of harms including individual oppression and the vanishing trial. Such views, focusing too narrowly on conformity to legal norms, overlook ordinary people's capacity for justice reasoning. A recent Scottish pilot study of small-claims mediation parties illustrates the richness and complexity of their thinking around whether, and for how much, to settle. This suggests that mediation settlements, rather than representing second-class just...
This study acknowledges that the field of mediation needs clarity, a sense of unity and an assurance...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
This Article argues that particularly within the context of the courts, mediation should be expected...
Mediation is enthusiastically promoted as a vehicle for providing access to justice. This is as true...
Mediation is enthusiastically promoted as a vehicle for providing access to justice. This is as true...
Representation is hallowed in American jurisprudence. Under the adversary approach manifested in the...
The trend toward court mediation is remarkable because our civil justice system has traditionally pr...
A justice system, and the processes located within it, ought to deliver justice. That seems simple e...
A justice system, and the processes located within it, ought to deliver justice. That seems simple e...
The author is grateful to Abbe Brown, Charlie Irvine, David Parratt and two anonymous reviewers for ...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
In this article, I offer a framing of the debates around mandatory mediation that rest on the premis...
In this article, I offer a framing of the debates around mandatory mediation that rest on the premis...
This study acknowledges that the field of mediation needs clarity, a sense of unity and an assurance...
This study acknowledges that the field of mediation needs clarity, a sense of unity and an assurance...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
This Article argues that particularly within the context of the courts, mediation should be expected...
Mediation is enthusiastically promoted as a vehicle for providing access to justice. This is as true...
Mediation is enthusiastically promoted as a vehicle for providing access to justice. This is as true...
Representation is hallowed in American jurisprudence. Under the adversary approach manifested in the...
The trend toward court mediation is remarkable because our civil justice system has traditionally pr...
A justice system, and the processes located within it, ought to deliver justice. That seems simple e...
A justice system, and the processes located within it, ought to deliver justice. That seems simple e...
The author is grateful to Abbe Brown, Charlie Irvine, David Parratt and two anonymous reviewers for ...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
In this article, I offer a framing of the debates around mandatory mediation that rest on the premis...
In this article, I offer a framing of the debates around mandatory mediation that rest on the premis...
This study acknowledges that the field of mediation needs clarity, a sense of unity and an assurance...
This study acknowledges that the field of mediation needs clarity, a sense of unity and an assurance...
Proponents of the “contemporary mediation movement” promised that parties would be able to exercise ...
This Article argues that particularly within the context of the courts, mediation should be expected...