This Article explores what is and what is not in adjudication and mediation, thus illuminating the profound differences between these two processes. The Article does this work in four parts. First, it offers an analysis of cognitive mapmaking and its inevitability in constructing meaning. It then explores how adjudication defines meaning in a particular way. This Article then conducts a comparable analysis of mediation. Finally, it focuses on the bridging function attorneys play between the worlds of mediation and adjudication
Frequent compliance with the adjudicative decisions of international institutions, such as the Inter...
This Article challenges a basic premise that litigants and their attorneys broadly understand and de...
This article examines references interactants make in the course of mediation sessions with the purp...
This Article explores what is and what is not in adjudication and mediation, thus illuminating the p...
Riskin's categorization of mediation has engendered much debate among academics and practitioners. A...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This Article sets forth an interpretive theory of adjudicative lawmaking according to which, under c...
Considerable recent scholarship in law, the social sciences, and literary theory has explored the wa...
Abstract. Mediation is an important method in dispute resolution. We implement a case based reasonin...
The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution ...
Legal systems make law in one of two ways: by abstracting general principles from the decisions made...
This experience stands in stark contrast to the thesis of Professor Deborah Hensler in her article, ...
Legal systems make law in one of two ways: by abstracting general principles from the decisions made...
Mediation as an Alternative Source of Law: A co-authored 2003 article, "Delegation as a Source of...
Adjudication is interpretation: Adjudication is the process by which a judge comes to understand and...
Frequent compliance with the adjudicative decisions of international institutions, such as the Inter...
This Article challenges a basic premise that litigants and their attorneys broadly understand and de...
This article examines references interactants make in the course of mediation sessions with the purp...
This Article explores what is and what is not in adjudication and mediation, thus illuminating the p...
Riskin's categorization of mediation has engendered much debate among academics and practitioners. A...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This Article sets forth an interpretive theory of adjudicative lawmaking according to which, under c...
Considerable recent scholarship in law, the social sciences, and literary theory has explored the wa...
Abstract. Mediation is an important method in dispute resolution. We implement a case based reasonin...
The United States is commited to increasing institutionalized use of alternative dispute resolution ...
Legal systems make law in one of two ways: by abstracting general principles from the decisions made...
This experience stands in stark contrast to the thesis of Professor Deborah Hensler in her article, ...
Legal systems make law in one of two ways: by abstracting general principles from the decisions made...
Mediation as an Alternative Source of Law: A co-authored 2003 article, "Delegation as a Source of...
Adjudication is interpretation: Adjudication is the process by which a judge comes to understand and...
Frequent compliance with the adjudicative decisions of international institutions, such as the Inter...
This Article challenges a basic premise that litigants and their attorneys broadly understand and de...
This article examines references interactants make in the course of mediation sessions with the purp...