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Archived articles from March 2014

17 articles found

A Short & Happy Guide to Mediation

By Beth Graham - March 31, 2014
Disputing would like to congratulate Dallas alternative dispute resolution professional Will Pryor on the publication of his new book, A Short & Happy Guide to Mediation.

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The Future of Class Arbitration Part I

By Renee Kolar - March 31, 2014
In recent years, the Supreme Court has frequently granted certiorari in class arbitration cases. In the wake of AT&T v. Concepcion and Stolt-Nielsen v. AnimalFeeds, commentary addressed the possibility that class arbitration was dead.

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Crowd Arbitration: Crowdsourced Dispute Resolution Part V

By Renee Kolar - March 28, 2014
Some forms of crowdsourced dispute resolution currently exist online. These dispute resolution processes can be put into three general categories: Opinion polls, online mock juries, and privately enforced crowdsourced dispute resolution.

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Crowd Arbitration: Crowdsourced Dispute Resolution Part IV

By Renee Kolar - March 27, 2014
Can crowd arbitration do justice? It depends, of course, on the definition of justice. According to H.L.A. Hart in The Concept of Law, justice means having like cases being treated alike.

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Crowd Arbitration: Crowdsourced Dispute Resolution Part III

By Renee Kolar - March 26, 2014
Do the benefits of time and cost savings make crowd arbitration a less reliable means of dispute resolution? In fact, the result is the opposite--having more people participate is actually likely to make the dispute resolution far more reliable and predictable than any other method.

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Crowd Arbitration: Crowdsourced Dispute Resolution Part II

By Renee Kolar - March 25, 2014
Crowdsourcing is a potential source of substantial benefits to dispute resolution. The main reason for these benefits is that crowdsourcing easily pools together the views of a large amount of people, far more than could be collected into a single room for arbitration or a courtroom.

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Crowd Arbitration: Crowdsourced Dispute Resolution Part I

By Renee Kolar - March 24, 2014
Meaningful artificial intelligence is still a far-away technology. But crowdsourced intelligence, which harnesses the collective knowledge, experience, and analysis of a large group of people, is quickly becoming a powerful and effective method for solving problems.

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Ohio Supreme Court Orders Jock Tax Dispute to Mediation

By Beth Graham - March 18, 2014
Last week, the Supreme Court of Ohio ordered two lawsuits filed by former professional football players over Cleveland, Ohio’s so-called “jock tax” to mediation.

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Who is Our Public Health Department Director? (And why does it matter?)

By Holly Hayes - March 17, 2014
Public health departments and health care providers across the spectrum have traditionally not collaborated in providing care in their community. According to Hospital and Health Networks Senior Writer, Paul Barr, that situation is changing.

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Soft Law in the Organization and General Conduct of Commercial Arbitration Proceedings

By Beth Graham - March 13, 2014
Professor Thomas J. Stipanowich, William H. Webster Chair in Dispute Resolution at Pepperdine University School of Law and Academic Director of the Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution, has written Soft Law in the Organization and General Conduct of Commercial Arbitration Proceedings, Chapter in, SOFT LAW IN INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION (forthcoming 2014); Pepperdine University Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2014/4.

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About Disputing

Disputing is published by Karl Bayer, a dispute resolution expert based in Austin, Texas. Articles published on Disputing aim to provide original insight and commentary around issues related to arbitration, mediation and the alternative dispute resolution industry.

To learn more about Karl and his team, or to schedule a mediation or arbitration with Karl’s live scheduling calendar, visit www.karlbayer.com.

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