The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution (ADR), most often based on the claim that it is superior to and different from traditional litigation. Mediation in particular is supposed in the popular view to be user-friendly, nonadversarial, and conducive to optimal, wholistic resolutions. Litigation, in contrast, is supposed to be slow, costly to all, impersonal, formal, legalistic, and incapable of giving complete or satisfactory resolutions. This implicitly assumes that ADR and litigation are discrete processes, each with uniform and intrinsic natures. This, in turn suggests an assumption that they retain these qualities under all circumstances. In this popularized, Manichean, and rom...
The Alternative Dispute Resolution Section of the Association of American Law Schools presented a pr...
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...
In this article, we first use existing research evidence to contextualize more clearly the place of ...
The past decade has seen significant expansion in the acceptance and use of mediation as a process f...
Internationally, the use of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is becoming standard in disputes be...
Mediation as an Alternative Source of Law: A co-authored 2003 article, "Delegation as a Source of...
It can no longer be doubted that alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ) as a substitute for court-ba...
The practice of mediation has gone through enormous change in the last twenty-five years. No longer ...
Professor Main argues that the modem ADR movement (and mediation in particular), rather than some (o...
Dispute resolution processes can be separated into two categories; the formal and the informal. Tho...
Formal conflict resolutions are very familiar from media as legal trials resulting in long prison se...
Across the country, people who file lawsuits are being diverted from adjudication to mediation. Wher...
Alternative Dispute Resolution ("ADR") is an alternative conflict settlement strategy. It follows th...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
textTraditionally, parties to a government contract have sought administrative or judicial review to...
The Alternative Dispute Resolution Section of the Association of American Law Schools presented a pr...
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...
In this article, we first use existing research evidence to contextualize more clearly the place of ...
The past decade has seen significant expansion in the acceptance and use of mediation as a process f...
Internationally, the use of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is becoming standard in disputes be...
Mediation as an Alternative Source of Law: A co-authored 2003 article, "Delegation as a Source of...
It can no longer be doubted that alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ) as a substitute for court-ba...
The practice of mediation has gone through enormous change in the last twenty-five years. No longer ...
Professor Main argues that the modem ADR movement (and mediation in particular), rather than some (o...
Dispute resolution processes can be separated into two categories; the formal and the informal. Tho...
Formal conflict resolutions are very familiar from media as legal trials resulting in long prison se...
Across the country, people who file lawsuits are being diverted from adjudication to mediation. Wher...
Alternative Dispute Resolution ("ADR") is an alternative conflict settlement strategy. It follows th...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
textTraditionally, parties to a government contract have sought administrative or judicial review to...
The Alternative Dispute Resolution Section of the Association of American Law Schools presented a pr...
AbstractMediation is one alternative form of dispute resolution. In the mediation, a win-win solutio...
In this article, we first use existing research evidence to contextualize more clearly the place of ...