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Action Lines
The telephone complaint processing services, provided
by individuals or organizations. Most
commonly, action line programs are
referred to as “offices of information
and complaint” within government
agencies, private industries, and the
media.
Adjudication
The solution to a particular
conflict as determined by a judge or
administrative hearing officer with
the authority to rule on the issue
in dispute. Generally speaking, adjudication
also implies that judgements will be
rendered according to objective standards,
rules, or laws.
Alternative DisputeResolution
(ADR)
Any procedure involving a neutral that is used as
an alternative to trial to resolve one or more issues
in controversy. It includes but is not limited to
the following ADR techniques: mediation, early neutral
case evaluation, mini-trial, summary bench trial,
summary jury trial, and arbitration.
Arbitration
The most traditional form of private dispute resolution.
A process where one or more arbitrators issue a
judgment (binding or non-binding) on the merits
after an expedited adversarial hearing. The formality
varies and may involve presentation of documents
and witnesses or simply a summary by counsel. A
decision is rendered that addresses liability and
damages, if necessary. It can take any of the following
forms: binding, non-binding, "baseball" or "final-offer", "bounded" or "high-low",
incentive.
Baseball Arbitration
In this process, used increasingly in commercial
disputes, each party submits a proposed monetary
award to the arbitrator. At the conclusion of the
hearing, the arbitrator chooses one award without
modification. This approach imposes limits on the
arbitrator's discretion and gives each party an
incentive to offer a reasonable proposal, in the
hope that it will be accepted by the decision-maker.
A related variation, referred to as "night baseball" arbitration,
requires the arbitrator to make a decision without
the benefit of the parties' proposals and then
to make the award to the party whose proposal is
closest to that of the arbitrator.
Binding Arbitration
A private adversarial process in which the disputing
parties choose a neutral person or a panel of three
neutrals to hear their dispute and to render a
final and binding decision or award. The process
is less formal than litigation; the parties can
craft their own procedures and determine if any
formal rules of evidence will apply. Unless there
has been fraud or some other defect in the arbitration
procedure, binding arbitration awards typically
are enforceable by courts and not subject to appellate
review. In order for the government to use binding
arbitration, it must follow special procedures
set forth in the Administrative Dispute Resolution
Act, 5 U.S.C. '' 571-584.
Bounded Arbitration
The parties agree privately without informing the
arbitrator that the arbitrator's final award will
be adjusted to a bounded range. Example: P wants
$200,000. D is willing to pay $70,000. Their high-low
agreement would provide that if the award is below
$70,000, D will pay at least $70,000; if the award
exceeds $200,000, the payment will be reduced to
$200,000. If the award is within the range, the
parties are bound by the figure in the award.
Co-Med-Arb
Addresses a problem that may occur
in med-arb, in which a party may
not believe that the arbitrator will
be able to discount unfavorable information
learned in mediation when making the arbitration
decision. In co-med-arb two different people perform
the roles of mediator and arbitrator. Jointly,
they preside over an information
exchange between the parties, after
which the mediator works with the
parties in the absence of the arbitrator. If mediation
fails to achieve a settlement, the case (or any
unresolved issues) can be submitted
to the arbitrator for a binding decision.
Conciliation
Conciliation involves building a positive relationship
between parties to a dispute. Often used interchangeably
with mediation, as a method of dispute settlement
whereby parties clarify issues and narrow differences
through the aid of a neutral facilitator. A conciliator
may assist parties by helping to establish communication,
clarifying misperceptions, dealing with strong
emotions, and building the trust necessary for
cooperative problem-solving. Some of the techniques
used by conciliators include providing for a
neutral meeting place, carrying initial messages
between/among the parties, reality testing regarding
perceptions or misperceptions, and affirming
the parties' abilities to work together. Since
a general objective of conciliation is often
to promote openness by the parties, this method
allows parties to begin dialogues, get to know
each other better, build positive perceptions,
and enhance trust.
Confidential Listener
The parties submit their confidential settlement
positions to a third-party neutral, who without
relaying one side's confidential offer to the other,
informs them whether their positions are within
a negotiable range. The parties may agree that
if the proposed settlement figures overlap, with
the plaintiff citing a lower figure, they will
settle at a level that splits the difference. If
the proposed figures are within a specified range
of each other (for example 10 percent), the parties
may direct the neutral to so inform them and help
them negotiate to narrow the gap. And if the submitted
numbers are not within the set range, the parties
might repeat the process.
Consensus Building or Census
Process
A procedure used in ADR processes such as negotiation,
facilitation, or mediation. By bringing all affected
parties (the stakeholders) into the process as early
as possible, the consensus-building procedure has
been effective in resolving major multiparty, multi-agency,
multi-government problems. The mediators in this
form may take a proactive role in defining the stakeholders;
getting stakeholders to agree to the mediation effort;
guiding the process; and upon reaching resolution,
administering the process of documentation by getting
the final approval and signatures from authorized
decision makers.
Convening
Helps to identify issues in controversy and the affected
interests. The convener, usually a neutral party,
generally determines whether direct negotiations
among the parties would be a suitable means to
resolve the issues; educates the parties about
the dispute resolution process; and brings the
parties together to determine negotiating ground
rules.
Cooperative Problem-Solving
This informal process usually does
not use the services of a third party
and typically takes place when the
concerned parties agree to resolve a question or
issue of mutual concern. It is a positive effort
by the parties to collaborate rather than compete
to resolve a dispute. Cooperative problem-solving
may be the procedure of first resort when the parties
recognize that a problem or dispute exists and
that they may be affected negatively
if the matter is not resolved. It
is most commonly used when a conflict
is not highly polarized and prior to the parties
forming "hard line" positions. This method is a key
element of labor-management cooperation programs.
Court-Annexed Arbitration
An adjudicatory dispute-resolution process in which
one or more arbitrators issue a non-binding judgment
on the merits, after an expedited, adversarial
hearing. The arbitrator's decision addresses only
the disputed legal issues and applies legal standards.
Either party may reject the non-binding ruling
and proceed to trial. Court-Annexed Mediation In
mediation, a neutral third party the mediator facilitates
negotiations among the parties to help them settle.
The mediation session is confidential and informal.
Disputants clarify their understandings of underlying
interests and concerns, probe the strengths and
weaknesses of legal positions, explore the consequences
of not settling, and generate settlement options.
The mediator, who may meet jointly or separately
with the parties, serves solely as a facilitator
and does not issue a decision or make findings
of fact.
Dispute Panels
Use one or more neutral or impartial individuals
who are available to the parties as a means to
clarify misperceptions, fill in information gaps,
or resolve differences over data or facts. The
panel reviews conflicting data or facts and suggests
ways for the parties to reconcile their differences.
These recommendations may be procedural in nature
or they may involve specific substantive recommendations,
depending on the authority of the panel and the
needs or desires of the parties. Information analyses
and suggestions made by the panel may be used by
the parties in other processes such as negotiations.
This method is generally an informal process and
the parties have considerable latitude about how
the panel is used. It is particularly useful in
those organizations where the panel is non-threatening
and has established a reputation for helping parties
work through and resolve their own disputes short
of using some formal dispute resolution process.
Early Neutral Case
A conference where the parties and their counsel
present the factual and legal bases of their case
and receive a non-binding assessment by an experienced
neutral with subject-matter expertise and/or with
significant trial experience in the jurisdiction.
This assessment can form the basis for settlement
discussions facilitated by the evaluator if the
parties so choose. Early neutral evaluation is
appropriate when the dispute involves technical
or factual issues that lend themselves to e xpert
evaluation. It is also used when the parties disagree
significantly about the value of their cases and
when the top decision makers of one or more of
the parties could be better informed about the
real strengths and weaknesses of their cases. Finally,
it is used when the parties are seeking an alternative
to the expensive and time-consuming process of
following discovery procedures.
Facilitation
Involves the use of techniques to improve the flow
of information in a meeting between parties to
a dispute. The techniques may also be applied to
decision-making meetings where a specific outcome
is desired (e.g., resolution of a conflict or dispute).
The term "facilitator" is often used
interchangeably with the term "mediator," but a
facilitator does not typically become as involved
in the substantive issues as does a mediator. The
facilitator focuses more on the process involved
in resolving a matter. The facilitator generally
works with all of the meeting's participants at
once and provides procedural directions as to how
the group can move efficiently through the problem-solving
steps of the meeting and arrive at the jointly
agreed upon goal. The facilitator may be a member
of one of the parties to the dispute or maybe an
external consultant. Facilitators focus on procedural
assistance and remain impartial to the topics or
issues under discussion. The method of facilitating
is most appropriate when:
(1) the intensity of the parties'
emotions about the issues in dispute
are low to moderate;
(2) the parties or issues are not extremely polarized;
(3) the parties have enough trust in each other
that they can work together to develop a mutually
acceptable solution; or
(4) the parties are in a common predicament and
they need or will benefit from a jointly-acceptable
outcome.
Fact-Finding
An investigation of a dispute by an impartial third
person who examines the issues and facts in the
case, and may issue a report and recommended settlement.
A process by which the facts relevant to a controversy
are determined. Fact-finding is a component of
other ADR procedures, and may take a number of
forms.
In neutral fact-finding,
the parties appoint a neutral third
party to perform the function, and
typically determine in advance whether
the results of the fact-finding will
be conclusive or advisory only.
With expert fact-finding, the parties privately
employ neutrals to render expert opinions that are
conclusive or nonbinding on technical, scientific
or legal questions. In the latter, a former judge
is often employed. Federal Rules of Evidence 706
gives courts the option of appointing neutral expert
fact-finders. And while the procedure was rarely
used in the past, courts increasingly find it an
effective approach in cases that require special
technical expertise, such as disputes over high-technology
questions. The neutral expert can be called as a
witness subject to cross-examination.
In joint fact-finding, the parties designate
representatives to work together to develop responses
to factual questions.
Final Offer Arbitration
See Baseball Arbitration.
Hearings
In the ADR sense, formal dispute resolution forums
in which a "hearings" officer is designated
by appropriate administrative authority such as
a city ordinance or Federal statute. This differs
from the formal hearings before an administrator
or administrative law judge informal administrative
adjudication forums.
High-Low
See Bounded Arbitration.
Incentive Arbitration
In non-binding arbitration, the parties agree to
a penalty if one of them rejects the arbitrator's
decision, resorts to litigation, and fails to improve
his position by some specified percentage or formula.
Penalties may include payment of attorneys' fees
incurred in the litigation.
Interest-Based Problem-Solving
A technique that creates effective
solutions while improving the relationship
between the parties. The process
separates the person from the problem,
explores all interests to define
issues clearly, brainstorms possibilities
and opportunities, and uses some
mutually agreed upon standard to
reach a solution. Trust in the process
is a common theme in successful interest-based
problem-solving. Interest-based problem-solving
is often used in collective bargaining
between labor and management in place
of traditional, position-based bargaining.
However, as a technique, it can be
effectively applied in many contexts
where two or more parties are seeking
to reach agreement.
Judge-Hosted Settlement Conferences
The most common form of ADR used
in federal and state courts is the
settlement conference presided over
by a judge or magistrate judge. The settlement
judge articulates judgments about
the merits of the case and facilitates
the trading of settlement offers.
Some settlement judges and magistrate judges also
use mediation techniques in the settlement conference
to improve communication among the parties, probe
barriers to settlement, and assist in formulating
resolutions.
Last-Offer Arbitration (Baseball)
Parties negotiate to the point of impasse, then respectively
submit a final offer to the arbitrator whose sole
responsibility is to select one or the other.
Mediation
The intervention into a dispute or negotiation of
an acceptable, impartial and neutral third party
who has no decision-making authority. The objective
of this intervention is to assist the parties involuntarily
reaching an acceptable resolution of issues in
dispute. Mediation is useful in highly-polarized
disputes where the parties have either been unable
to initiate a productive dialogue, or where the
parties have been talking and have reached a seemingly
insurmountable impasse. A mediator, like a facilitator,
makes primarily procedural suggestions regarding
how parties can reach agreement. Occasionally,
a mediator may suggest some substantive options
as a means of encouraging the parties to expand
the range of possible resolutions under consideration.
A mediator often works with the parties individually,
in caucuses, to explore acceptable resolution options
or to develop proposals that might move the parties
closer to resolution. Mediators differ in their
degree of directiveness or control while assisting
disputing parties. Some mediators set the stage
for bargaining, make minimal procedural suggestions,
and intervene in the negotiations only to avoid
or overcome a deadlock. Other mediators are much
more involved in forging the details of a resolution.
Regardless of how directive the mediator is, the
mediator performs the role of catalyst that enables
the parties to initiate progress toward their own
resolution of issues in dispute.
Meditation-Arbitration
Commonly known as "med-arb," a variation
of the arbitration procedure in which an impartial
or neutral third party is authorized by the disputing
parties to mediate their dispute until such time
as they reach an impasse. As part of the process,
when impasse is reached, the third party is authorized
by the parties to issue a binding opinion on the
cause of the impasse or the remaining issue(s) in
dispute. In some cases, med-arb utilizes two outside
parties--one to mediate the dispute and another to
arbitrate any remaining issues after the mediation
process is completed. This is done to address some
parties' concerns that the process, if handled by
one third party, mixes and confuses procedural assistance
(a characteristic of mediation) with binding decision
making (a characteristic of arbitration). The concern
is that parties might be less likely to disclose
necessary information for a settlement or are more
likely to present extreme arguments during the mediation
stage if they know that the same third party will
ultimately make a decision on the dispute. Mediated
arbitration is useful in narrowing issues more quickly
than under arbitration alone and helpsparties focus
their resources on the truly difficult issues involved
in a dispute in a more efficient and effective manner.
Mini-Trial
A non-binding hearing, generally
reserved for complex cases, in which
counsel for each party informally
presents a shortened form of its case to settlement-authorized
representatives of the parties in the presence
of a presiding judge, magistrate
judge, or other neutral, at th econclusion
of which the representatives meet,
with or without the judge or neutral, to negotiate
a settlement.
Multidoor Courthouse or Multi-Option
ADR
This term describes courts that offer an array of
dispute resolution options or screen cases and then
channel them to particular ADR methods. Some multidoor
courthouses refer all cases of certain types to particular
ADR programs, while other offer litigants a menu
of options in each case.
Multiparty Coordinated Defense
A coordinated joint defense strategy
in which a neutral facilitator helps
multiple defendants negotiate, organize,
and manage cooperative joint-party
arrangements that are ancillary to
the main dispute. In the process,
they streamline the steps toward resolution. Coordinate
ddefense efforts include agreements to: limit infighting
among defendants; use joint counsel and experts.
Assign and share discovery and research tasks;
coordinate and share the results
of procedural maneuvers; and apportion
liability payments, should they be
imposed.
Multi-Step
Parties may agree, either when a specific dispute
arises, or earlier in a contract clause, to engage
in a progressive series of dispute resolution procedures.
One step typically is some form of negotiation,
preferably face-to-face between the parties. If
unsuccessful, a second tier of negotiation between
higher levels of executives may resolve the matter.
The next step may be mediation or another facilitated
settlement effort. If no resolution has been reached
at any of the earlier stages, the agreement can
provide for a binding resolution through arbitration,
private adjudication or litigation.
Negotiated Rule-Making
Also known as regulatory negotiation, this ADR method
is an alternative to the traditional approach of
U.S. government agencies to issue regulations after
a lengthy notice and comment period. In reg-neg,
as it is called, agency officials and affected
private parties meet under the guidance of a neutral
facilitator to engage in joint negotiation and
drafting of the rule. The public is then asked
to comment on the resulting, proposed rule. By
encouraging participation by interested stakeholders,
the process makes use of private parties' perspectives
and expertise, and can help avoid subsequent litigation
over the resulting rule.
Negotiation
A process by which disputants communicate their differences
to one another through conference, discussion and
compromise, in order to resolve them.
Non-binding Arbitration
This process works the same way as binding arbitration
except that the neutral's decision is advisory
only. The parties my agree in advance to use the
advisory decision as a tool in resolving their
dispute through negotiation or other means.
Ombudsperson
Individuals who rely on a number of techniques to
resolve disputes .These techniques include counseling,
mediating, conciliating, and fact-finding. Usually,
when an ombudsman receives a complaint, he or she
interviews the parties, reviews files, and makes
recommendations to the disputants. Typically, ombudsmen
do not impose solutions. The power of the ombudsman
lies in his or her ability to persuade the parties
involved to accept his or her recommendations.
Generally, an individual not accepting the proposed
solution of the ombudsman is free to pursue a remedy
in other forums for dispute resolution. Ombudsmen
may be used to handle employee workplace complaints
and disputes or complaints and disputes from outside
of the place of employment, such as those from
customers or clients. Ombudsmen are often able
to identify and track systemic problems and suggest
ways of dealing with those problems.
Partnering
Used to improve a variety of working relationships,
primarily between the Federal Government and contractors,
by seeking to prevent disputes before they occur.
The method relies on an agreement in principle
to share the risks involved in completing a project
and to establish and promote a nurturing environment.
This is done through the use of team-building activities
to help define common goals, improve communication,
and foster a problem-solving attitude among the
group of individuals who must work together throughout
a contract's term. Partnering in the contract setting
typically involves an initial partnering workshop
after the contract award and before the work begins.
This is a facilitated workshop involving the key
stakeholders in the project. The purpose of the
workshop is to develop a team approach to the project.
This generally results in a partnership agreement
that includes dispute prevention and resolution
procedures.
Peer Review
A problem-solving process where an employee takes
a dispute to a group or panel of fellow employees
and managers for a decision. The decision may or
may not be binding on the employee and/or the employer,
depending on the conditions of the particular process.
If it is not binding on the employee, he or she
would be able to seek relief in traditional forums
for dispute resolution if dissatisfied with the
decision under peer review. The principle objective
of the method is to resolve disputes early before
they become formal complaints or grievances. Typically,
the panel is made up of employees and managers
who volunteer for this duty and who are trained
in listening, questioning, and problem-solving
skills as well as the specific policies and guidelines
of the panel. Peer review panels may be standing
groups of individuals who are available to address
whatever disputes employees might bring to the
panel at any given time. Other panels may be formed
on an ad hoc basis through some selection process
initiated by the employee, e.g., blind selection
of a certain number of names from a pool of qualified
employees and managers.
Pre-dispute ADR Contract Clause
A clause included in the parties' agreement to specify
a method for resolving disputes that may arise under
that agreement. It may refer toone or more ADR techniques,
even naming the third party that will serve as an
arbitrator or mediator in the case.
Pre-negotiation
The process of preparing for negotiation. It includes
assessing the conflict and designing the process
as well as anything else necessary to bring disputing
parties together to begin resolving their differences.
May be used interchangeably with convening.
Private Judges or Rent-A-Judge
A fairly new innovation by some private dispute resolution
firms and some courts. Retired judges typically are
used to hear these cases which would have been taken
to real court, and the parties agree in advance to
accept the decision as if it were a real court decision.
The advantages of this process are speed, privacy,
and the ability of the parties to select a judge
with expertise in the disputed matter.
Settlement Conferences
Involve a pre-trial conference conducted by a settlement
judge or referee and attended by representatives
for the opposing parties (and sometimes attended
by the parties themselves) in order to reach a mutually
acceptable settlement of the matter in dispute. The
method is used in the judicial system and is a common
practice in some jurisdictions. Courts that use this
method may mandate settlement conferences in certain
circumstances. The role of a settlement judge is
similar to that of a mediator in that he or she assists
the parties procedurally in negotiating an agreement.
Such judges play much stronger authoritative roles
than mediators, since they also provide the parties
with specific substantive and legal information about
what the disposition of the case might be if it were
to go to court. They also provide the parties with
possible settlement ranges that could be considered.
Settlement Judges
Serve essentially as mediators or neutral evaluators
in cases pending before a tribunal. The settlement
judge is usually a second judge from the same body
as the judge who will ultimately make the decision
if the case is not resolved by the parties. Magistrates
in the Federal court system often serve as settlement
judges and may compel attendance of senior officials
and business heads who have decision making authority.
Stakeholders
All the individuals, organizations, businesses, and
institutions - public and private - that have standing
and will be affected by decisions related to an issue
in controversy.
Summary Bench Trial
A pretrial procedure used in non-jury cases intended
to facilitate settlement, consisting of a summarized
presentation of a case to a Judicial Officer whose
decision and subsequent factual and legal analysis
serves as an aid to settlement negotiations.
Summary Jury Trial
A flexible non-binding procedure, usually reserved
for trial-ready cases in which protracted jury trials
are anticipated, involving a short hearing in which
evidence is presented by counsel in summary form,
after which a jury returns an advisory verdict that
forms the basis for settlement negotiations.
Two-Track Approach
Involves use of ADR processes or traditional settlement
negotiations in conjunction with litigation. Representatives
of the disputing parties who are not involved in
the litigation are used to conduct the settlement
negotiations or ADR procedure. The negotiation or
ADR efforts may proceed concurrently with litigation
or during an agreed-upon cessation of litigation.
This approach is particularly useful incases when:
it may not be feasible to abandon litigation while
the parties explore settlement possibilities; or
as a practical matter, the specter of litigation
must be present in order for the opposing party to
consider or agree to an alternative mechanism. It
is also useful when the litigation has become acrimonious
or when a suggestion of settlement would be construed
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