Not exact matches
Common
types of ADR include
mediation, neutral evaluation and arbitration,
which generally provide more...
The
Mediation Bill 2017 (the «Bill»)
which was published on the 13 February 2017 seeks to formalise what is already a popular non-adversarial method for resolving many different
types of disputes.
[6] Alternative legal services (ALSs) are, for example: clinics
of various
types; self - help webpages; phone - in services; paralegal and law student programs; family
mediation services; social justice tribunals; and court procedures simplification projects; arbitration and
mediation for dispute resolution; public legal education information services; programs for targeted (unbundled) limited retainer legal services (as distinguished from a full retainer to provide the whole legal service); pro bono (free) legal services for short and simple cases; and, the National Self - Represented Litigants Project, the purpose
of which is to help self - represented litigants to be better litigants without lawyers.
[iii] Alternative legal services (ALSs) are, for example: clinics
of various
types, self - help webpages, phone - in services, paralegal and law student programs, family
mediation services, social justice tribunals, court procedures simplification projects, arbitration and
mediation for dispute resolution, public legal education information services, programs for targeted (unbundled) limited retainer legal services (as distinguished from a full retainer to provide all
of the legal services necessary), pro bono (free) legal services for short and simple cases, and the National Self - Represented Litigants Project, the purpose
of which is to help self - represented litigants to be more effective self - represented litigants.
This course surveys the most common
types of alternative dispute resolution processes: negotiation,
mediation, arbitration, and court - annexed and governmental - agency ADR - all
of which have gained wide - spread use as alternatives to traditional litigation.
Mediation Analysis: A
type of statistical analysis
which helps explain how one variable influences another by looking at possible mediators.
There are at least two
types of conflict that can crop up in
mediation: conflict over data or information,
which is also known as cognitive conflict, and conflict over feelings, or affective conflict.