Aim: This PhD argues, in the context of conflict resolution in the built environment, that negotiated settlements are a human good – and ergo are worth pursuing in most cases – and that pragmatism, rather than ‘rights’ talk, is properly at the forefront of most decision-making in the private law context. This challenges the dominant discourse, which sanctifies rights, views court-based litigation as a panacea, and lawyers and binary win–lose scenarios as ‘resolutions’. This thesis shows, through the interaction of theory and practice, that the private law sphere is distinct from the public law paradigm. Contrary to the orthodoxy of the theorists criticised in the PhD, alternative dispute resolution works for the good of the parties and for ...
Partisanship can make policy discussion and civil debate difficult. Partisan differences in how fact...
It is widely acknowledged that lawyers generally perform a gate-keeping role, advising clients on th...
Lumineau, F., & Oxley, J. E. (2012). Let's work it out (or we'll see you in court): Litigation and p...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
British social philosopher Stuart Hampshire recently articulated the fundamental and foundational pr...
The law plays an important role in land-use conflicts that mobilize people against projects close to...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
There are three specific purposes of Construction Dispute Research. First, this volume aims to summa...
In the essay that follows, I advocate for greater acceptance of the diversity of belief and practice...
This article considers the relationship between the interests of individual litigants and the facili...
Disputes or conflicts are common in different places and circumstances and may arise among neighbour...
For more than two decades, some of the most respected scholars in the field of dispute resolution ha...
This thesis concerns the understanding of disagreement, exploring what implications its study might ...
In her article, Public Courts versus Private Justice: It\u27s Time to Let Some Sun Shine in on Alter...
The rule of law is predicated on the rights of citizens to choose their dispute resolution forum and...
Partisanship can make policy discussion and civil debate difficult. Partisan differences in how fact...
It is widely acknowledged that lawyers generally perform a gate-keeping role, advising clients on th...
Lumineau, F., & Oxley, J. E. (2012). Let's work it out (or we'll see you in court): Litigation and p...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
British social philosopher Stuart Hampshire recently articulated the fundamental and foundational pr...
The law plays an important role in land-use conflicts that mobilize people against projects close to...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
There are three specific purposes of Construction Dispute Research. First, this volume aims to summa...
In the essay that follows, I advocate for greater acceptance of the diversity of belief and practice...
This article considers the relationship between the interests of individual litigants and the facili...
Disputes or conflicts are common in different places and circumstances and may arise among neighbour...
For more than two decades, some of the most respected scholars in the field of dispute resolution ha...
This thesis concerns the understanding of disagreement, exploring what implications its study might ...
In her article, Public Courts versus Private Justice: It\u27s Time to Let Some Sun Shine in on Alter...
The rule of law is predicated on the rights of citizens to choose their dispute resolution forum and...
Partisanship can make policy discussion and civil debate difficult. Partisan differences in how fact...
It is widely acknowledged that lawyers generally perform a gate-keeping role, advising clients on th...
Lumineau, F., & Oxley, J. E. (2012). Let's work it out (or we'll see you in court): Litigation and p...