Event Title
ADR and the Courts: An Update
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.
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/iss6/5ADR 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.
Comments
This event was not recorded.