Event Title

ADR and the Courts: An Update

Presenter Information

Patricia M. Wald

Location

Duke Law School

Start Date

7-3-1997 2:15 PM

End Date

7-3-1997 3:00 PM

Description

For well over a decade now, Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and all its variations have been hailed in rhetoric and anecdote as the Prince Charming to a court system in distress. The author briefly examines three kinds of ADR programs: those that take place inside the court (which are sometimes called "court-annexed programs"), those that occur inside the administrative agency (or "agency-annexed programs," only a small portion of whose product may come before the courts), and negotiated regulations, some of which (despite all good efforts) continue to be challenged on review.

Comments

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Related Paper

Patricia M. Wald, ADR and the Courts: An Update, 46 Duke Law Journal 1445-1473 (1997)

Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol46/iss6/5


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Mar 7th, 2:15 PM Mar 7th, 3:00 PM

ADR and the Courts: An Update

Duke Law School

For well over a decade now, Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and all its variations have been hailed in rhetoric and anecdote as the Prince Charming to a court system in distress. The author briefly examines three kinds of ADR programs: those that take place inside the court (which are sometimes called "court-annexed programs"), those that occur inside the administrative agency (or "agency-annexed programs," only a small portion of whose product may come before the courts), and negotiated regulations, some of which (despite all good efforts) continue to be challenged on review.