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What is Court-Annexed Mediation?
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 understanding 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. A hallmark of mediation is its capacity to help parties expand traditional settlement discussions and broaden resolution options, often by going beyond the legal issues in controversy.
Mediation. works much the same in courts and in private settings, with a few important differences. A court mediation program may be based in the court, or may involve referral by the court to outside ADR programs run by bar associations, nonprofit groups, other local courts, or private ADR providers. Some courts require litigants to use mediation in what are known as mandatory mediation programs. The purpose of the mediation session is unchanged whether litigants enter the program voluntarily or by court mandate. The court mediator may be a lawyer trained in mediation and compensated by the parties, or serve as a volunteer. Judges, magistrate judges, or court ADR professionals also serve as mediators in some court programs.
· Mediation is the primary ADR process in federal, state and local courts, second only to the traditional judicial settlement conference. Mediation has proved useful in so many kinds of disputes that some experts favor its use in all civil cases, to improve case management and settlement.
· In the federal system, more than 40 of the 94 district courts and almost all the circuit courts have mediation programs using judges or lawyers as mediators. Mediation programs are also underway in more than one-third of the state courts and in many bankruptcy courts.
CPR Institute for Dispute Resolution, 2000
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