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Unfootnoted Summary), 3 Disp. Resol. Mag. 12-13 (1997); Wayne D. | | Brazil, Comparing Structures for the Delivery of ADR Services by | | Courts: Critical Values and Concerns, 14 Ohio St. J. on Disp. | | Resol. 715 (1999); Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse | | and Revival of American Community (2000) (discussion the causes | | for the decline of civic engagement and ways of ameliorating the | | situation). |
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| | | State courts and legislatures have perceived these benefits, | | as well as the popularity of mediation, and have publicly | | supported mediation through funding and statutory provisions | | that have expanded dramatically over the last twenty years. | | See, Cole et al., supra 5:1-5:19; Richard C. Reuben, The | | Lawyer Turns Peacemaker, 82 A.B.A. J. 54 (Aug. 1996). The | | legislative embodiment of this public support is more than | | 2500 state and federal statutes and many more administrative | | and court rules related to mediation. See Cole et al, supra | | apps. A and B. |
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| | | The primary guarantees of fairness within mediation are the | | integrity of the process and informed self-determination. | | Self-determination also contributes to party satisfaction. | | Consensual dispute resolution allows parties to tailor not | | only the result but also the process to their needs, with | | minimal intervention by the State. For example, parties can | | agree with the mediator on the general approach to mediation, | | including whether the mediator will be evaluative or | | facilitative. This party agreement is a flexible means to deal | | with expectations regarding the desired style of mediation, | | and so increases party empowerment. Indeed, some scholars have | | theorized that individual empowerment is a central benefit of | | mediation. See, e.g., Robert A. Baruch Bush & Joseph P. | | Folger, The Promise of Mediation (1994). |
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| | | Self-determination is encouraged by provisions that limit | | the potential for coercion of the parties to accept | | settlements, see Section 9(a), and that allow parties to have | | counsel or other support persons present during the mediation | | session. See Section 10. The Act promotes the integrity of the | | mediation process by requiring the mediator to disclose | | conflicts of interest, and to be candid about qualifications. | | See Section 9. |
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| | | 3. Importance of uniformity. |
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| | | This Act is designed to simplify a complex area of the law. | | Currently, legal rules affecting mediation can be found in | | more than 2500 statutes. Many of these statutes can be | | replaced by the Act, which applies a generic approach to | | topics that are covered in varying ways by a number of | | specific statutes currently scattered within substantive | | provisions. |
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