Newsletter Subscribe
Home View Cart My Account
Go
A Product Priority Code is a product's three or four digit identification number that will navigate you directly to that product’s page. To receive product priority codes and associated product discount coupons, sign up for our mailing list.

How to Achieve the Best Results in Mediation - Chapter 42 - AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition

 
Price:
$35.00
Author: Karin S. Hobbs
Page Count: 10
Published: September 2010
Media Desc: PDF from "AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition"
File Size: 45.3 KB
Qty:
 
 
Description

   Originally from: 

AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition - Electronic

AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition - Hardcover


 

CHAPTER 42- Preview Page

 

HOW TO ACHIEVE THE BEST RESULTS IN MEDIATION
Karin S. Hobbs
 
I. Introduction
Lawyers are there to solve problems. Traditionally, lawyers have filed lawsuits as the expected mode of dispute resolution. However, lawyers and clients have learned that litigation often escalates emotions, increases costs, confuses the dispute, and delays resolution of the problem. Further, litigation almost always results in a win for one side and a loss for the other. Mediation, in comparison, is less expensive, significantly faster, and provides a solution that both sides agree upon. As a result, mediation has become an increasingly attractive method of resolving disputes.
 
Because the judicial process and the mediation process are vastly different methods of dispute resolution, mediation preparation differs dramatically from that of litigation. The judicial system is premised on the theory that if both sides present evidence to a neutral judge or jury, the truth will surface, and the fact-finder will resolve the dispute fairly. In mediation, however, it is the parties who identify the issues, their interests, and their needs to determine whether—considering all the risks— they can resolve the dispute fairly. The parties are the decision-makers and are empowered to make decisions in the context of mediation. In litigation, however, the parties are asking attorneys to speak for them and for a neutral to decide the case. Judge-imposed...
Table of Contents

Full TABLE OF CONTENTS from "AAA Handbook on Mediation - 2nd Edition"


Foreword
 
 
James R. Holbrook
 
Douglas E. Noll
 
Cris M. Currie
 
Ira B. Lobel
 
Mark R. Sherman
 
Steven L. Schwartz
 
Gerald F. Phillips
 
David L. Erickson and Peter Geoffrey Bowen
 
Amy L. Lieberman
 
Roger J. Peters and Deborah Bovarnick Mastin
 
 
Peter J. Comodeca
 
Bruce A. Blitman
 
Joel E. Davidson
 
Howard D. Venzie, Jr.
 
Jordi Agustí-Panareda
 
John Patrick Dolan
Bennett G. Picker
 
Gerald F. Phillips
 
Judith B. Ittig
 
Donald R. Philbin, Jr.
 
William A. Blancato and C. Allen Gibson, Jr.
 
 
Robert S. Peckar
 
Fred D. Butler
 
Cris M. Currie
 
Lee A. Rosengard
 
Kevin W. Cruthirds
 
Mercédeh Azeredo da Silveira
 
Judith P. Meyer and Irena Vanekova
 
 
Nancy Kauffman and Barbara Davis
 
Gerald S. Clay and James K. Hoenig
 
Dwight Golann and Marjorie Corman Aaron
 
James E. McGuire
 
Donna M. Stringer and Lonnie Lusardo
 
Richard P. Flake
 
John M. Livingood
 
Charles B. Craver
 
Bruce A. Blitman and Jeanne Maes
 
Evan Slavitt
 
Robbie Mac Pherson
 
Jeffrey L. McClellan
 
James R. Madison
 
 
Karin S. Hobbs
 
David Grappo
 
L. Randolph Lowry
 
L. Therese White and Bill White
 
Roger M. Deitz
 
Mori Irvine
 
Harold I. Abramson
 
Jeffrey Krivis
 
Robert W. Hassold, Jr.
 
Kent B. Scott and Cody W. Wilson
 
 
Dennis Sharp
 
Mattox Hair, Sharon Press and Brooks Rathet
 
Paul M. Lurie and Jeremy S. Baker
 
 
Donald Lee Rome
 
Elissa Tonkin
 
Donald Lee Rome
 
Robert A. Harris
 
Lynn Sylvester and Ira B. Lobel
 
Robert S. Peckar
 
Amy G. London
 
Albert Bates, Jr. and L. Tyrone Holt
 
Vivian Berger
 
 
Jay W. Stein
 
Jeffrey Krivis
 
Bruce E. Meyerson
 
David J. McLean and Sean-Patrick Wilson
 
Index
 
Author Detail

Karin S. Hobbs has mediated over 3,500 disputes over her 11 years as a full time mediator. In private mediation practice since, 2001, she was formerly Chief Appellate Mediator at the Utah Court of Appeals, board member of the Utah Council on Conflict Resolution, and chair of the Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee of the Utah State Bar. She is on the Board of the International Academy of Mediators, a member of the American College of Civil Trial Mediators, and regularly teaches negotiation and mediation to attorneys. Ms. Hobbs received her J.D. from the University of Utah S. J. Quinney College of Law.