Dispute Processes: ADR and the Primary Forms of Decision-making (Law in Context)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: 3, 7/9/2020
EAN 9781107070547, ISBN10: 1107070546
Hardcover, 428 pages, 24.1 x 17.1 x 2 cm
Language: English
This wide-ranging study considers the primary forms of decision-making – negotiation, mediation, umpiring, as well as the processes of avoidance and violence – in the context of rapidly changing discourses and practices of civil justice across a range of jurisdictions. Many contemporary discussions in this field–and associated projects of institutional design–are taking place under the broad but imprecise label of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). The book brings together and analyses a wide range of materials dealing with dispute processes, and the current debates on and developments in civil justice. With the help of analysis of materials beyond those ordinarily found in the ADR literature, it provides a comprehensive and comparative perspective on modes of handling civil disputes. The new edition is thoroughly revised and is extended to include new chapters on avoidance and self-help, the ombuds, Online Dispute Resolution and pressures of institutionalisation.
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
2. Cultures of decision-making
precursors to the emergence of ADR
3. The debates around civil justice and the movement towards procedural innovation
4. Disputes and dispute processes
5. Development of disputes, avoidance and self help
6. Negotiations
7. Mediation
8. Umpiring
courts and tribunals
9. Umpiring
arbitration
10. Hybrid forms and processual experimentation
11. The ombuds and its diffusion
from public to private
12. ODR and its diffusion
from private to public
13. Institutionalization of ADR
14. Reflections
Appendix A. Some role plays
Bibliography
Further reading
Index.