Mediation: a practical guide

Mediation: a practical guide

Alex Bevan, Guy Hollebon, Lucinda Bromfield

Leadership & Strategy

Overview

Everything You Need To Know About Mediation

Do you know how to get the best out of mediation for yourself and your clients?

Do you know how to set up, prepare and conduct yourself at mediation?

Are you aware of the advantages and benefits of mediation, and of the pitfalls to avoid?

In 1999 judges were given the power to suggest that opposing parties try mediation rather than proceed straight to litigation, thereby saving both money and stress. More than a decade on, and with the court system increasingly overstretched, mediation is being used as a valid, dynamic, confidential and extraordinarily effective process for dispute resolution.

This Mediation Briefing will guide you through every aspect of the process, from deciding whether a dispute is suitable for mediation, through the arrangement and preparation process, and on to the actual mediation and its resolution. The Briefing also guides the reader through the different types of mediation, from its use in the workplace through to cases of clinical negligence.

This Special Briefing covers

  • Advantages and disadvantages of mediation.
  • Why mediation is successful.
  • Suitability of a case for mediation.
  • When to use mediation.
  • Selecting a mediator
  • Costs involved vs benefits achieved
  • Preparation before mediation
  • Legal aspects of mediation, including use of information revealed in mediation

Who should read this Briefing?

  • Lawyers
  • Accountants
  • Surveyors
  • HR Professionals
  • Other professionals involved in mediation
  • Individuals taking part in mediation

Book Details

Format:
eBook
ISBN:
9781854188625
Pages:
119
Publication Date:
2013
Format:
Download (PDF)
ISBN:
978 185418763 5
Pages:
200
Publication Date:
2010

Content

1. What is mediation?
  • How is mediation practised in the UK?
  • Advantages and disadvantages of mediation
  • Why is mediation successful?
  • Some mediation providers in the UK
2. Suitability of the case for meditation
  • Suitability
  • Timing
  • Case factors favouring mediation
  • Factors possibly militating against mediation
3. Arranging a mediation
  • Client agreement
  • Getting the other side to agree to mediation
  • Selecting the mediator
  • Length of the mediation
  • Venue for the mediation
  • Costs
  • Checklist for arranging a mediation
4. Before the mediation
  • Preparation for the representative
  • Preparation with the client
  • The position statement
  • The mediation agreement (also known as ‘the agreement to mediate’)
  • Guidance for your conduct in a mediation
5. At the mediation
  • The opening statement at the joint session
  • Exploration in private sessions
  • Negotiation
  • Bridging the hard gap and some mediation techniques
  • Techniques
  • Drawing up heads of terms or a consent order
6. After the mediation
  • The case settled at mediation
  • The case did not settle
  • Use of information or documents gained at a mediation
  • Was an agreement reached at mediation?
  • Bad faith negotiating at mediation
7. Mediation in different sectors
  • Employment and workplace mediation
  • Workplace mediation
  • Employment mediation
  • Shareholder, company and partnership disputes
  • Construction
  • Financial services
  • Mediation in family disputes
  • Community mediation
  • Mediation in education
  • Commercial litigation
  • General litigation
  • Personal injury
  • Clinical negligence
  • Probate and inheritance claims
  • Mediation in other jurisdictions

Appendices

  • Position Statement
  • Mediation Agreement
  • Tomlin Order
  • Directive 2008/52/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21st May 2008 on certain aspects of mediation in civil and commercial matters
  • Checklists– arranging a mediation, preparation with the client, guidelines for behaviour at the mediation
  • Civil procedures rules (CPR)
  • Practice direction 31 (HONG KONG)
  • Kodeks Postepowania Cywilnego (Poland)
  • Useful Information