
Regulating Dispute Resolution
Description
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The aim of this book is to contribute to the understanding and development of the legal framework governing national and international dispute resolution. Theory, empirical research and regulatory models have been taken from the wealth of experience in 12 jurisdictions: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, England and Wales, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland and the United States of America. Experts with a background in academia, practice and law-making describe and analyse the regulatory framework and social reality of dispute resolution in these countries. On this basis the authors draw conclusions about policy choices, regulatory strategies and the practice of conflict resolution.
This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's International Arbitration online service.
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Persons
Hannes Unberath, Professor of Law at the University of Bayreuth (deceased).
Hazel Genn DBE, QC (Hon), Dean of Laws, University College London.
Reinhard Greger, Professor of Law at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg.
Carrie Menkel-Meadow, Professor of Law at UC Irvine School of Law and Professor of Dispute Resolution and Civil Procedure at Georgetown University Law School.
Content
1 Guide for Regulating Dispute Resolution (GRDR): Principles
Felix Steffek and Hannes Unberath (coordinators), Lin Adrian, Aldo De Matteis, Giuseppe De Palo, Frédérique Ferrand, Reinhard Greger, Jana Härtling, Ulrike Janzen, Shusuke Kakiuchi, Lars Kirchhoff , Peter G Mayr, Isaak Meier, Kristin Nemeth, Machteld Pel, Anneken K Sperr and Ivan Verougstraete
2 Guide for Regulating Dispute Resolution (GRDR): Principles and Comments
Felix Steff ek and Hannes Unberath (coordinators), Lin Adrian, Aldo De Matteis, Giuseppe De Palo, Frédérique Ferrand, Reinhard Greger, Jana Härtling, Ulrike Janzen, Shusuke Kakiuchi, Lars Kirchhoff , Peter G Mayr, Isaak Meier, Kristin Nemeth, Machteld Pel, Anneken K Sperr and Ivan Verougstraete
3 Principled Regulation of Dispute Resolution: Taxonomy, Policy, Topics
Felix Steffek
Part 2: Regulation of Dispute Resolution
4 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Austria: A Traditional Litigation Culture Slowly Embraces ADR
Peter G Mayr and Kristin Nemeth
5 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Belgium: Workable Solutions?
Ivan Verougstraete
6 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Denmark: Mediation, Arbitration, Boards and Tribunals
Lin Adrian
7 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in England and Wales: A Sceptical Analysis of Government and Judicial Promotion of Private Mediation
Hazel Genn, Shiva Riahi and Katherine Pleming
8 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in France: Evolutions and Challenges
Frédérique Ferrand
9 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Germany: Cautious Steps towards the Construction of an ADR System
Burkhard Hess and Nils Pelzer
10 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Italy: The Bumps in the Road to Successful ADR
Giuseppe De Palo and Ashley E Oleson
11 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Japan: Alternative Dispute Resolution and its Background
Shusuke Kakiuchi
12 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in the Netherlands: Does Regulation Support or Hinder the Use of ADR?
Machteld Pel
13 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Norway: Vertical and Horizontal Regulatory Strategies
Anneken Kari Sperr
14 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in Switzerland: Mediation, Conciliation and Other Forms of ADR in Switzerland
Isaak Meier in cooperation with Miguel Sogo, Sotirios Kotronis, Sarah Scheiwiller, David Siegwart, Claudia Wyss, Dheden Zotsang and Carlo Hamburger
15 Regulation of Dispute Resolution in the United States of America: From the Formal to the Informal to the 'Semi-formal'
Carrie Menkel-Meadow
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