Appropriate Dispute Resolution in Comparative Perspectives
ISBN:
978-3-03-157475-7
Auflage:
2024
Verlag:
Economic and Social Research Council, Springer, Springer International Publishing
Land des Verlags:
Schweiz
Erscheinungsdatum:
24.07.2024
Reihe:
Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice
Format:
Hardcover
Seitenanzahl:
170
Lieferung in 5-10 Werktagen
Versandkostenfrei ab 40 Euro in Österreich
This book explores the various types of Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR) applied in Nigeria, the UK, and the US. It critically examines the effectiveness of mediation, arbitration, restorative justice, collaborative law, and online dispute resolution (ODR) in settling disputes or conflicts, while also demonstrating the benefits of ADR and multi-door courthouses (MDCs). The book provides a concise introduction to the resolution of disputes or conflicts in Africa prior to the advent of colonial rule. It suggests that a ‘legal transplant’ can also take place from a less complex society to a more complex one, contrary to the general belief that legal transplants usually proceed from a more complex society to a less complex one.
The book aims to help people understand ADR mechanisms and the advantages of settling disputes using means other than litigation. It presents Traditional African Methods of Settling Disputes (TAMSD), Early Dispute Resolution (EDR), arbitration, negotiation, ODR, collaborative law, restorative justice, conciliation, ombuds, and early neutral evaluation as viable alternatives. It also highlights the need for clinical legal education and effective messaging that highlights the benefits of ADR compared to traditional litigation. In turn, it analyses the use of ADR, especially mediation and collaborative law, to settle disputes in criminal law, restorative justice, employment law, and business and human rights due diligence/violation cases. Further, the book demonstrates that criminal matters are now under the scope of ADR via Restorative Justice Door.
The book discusses the skills, techniques, and relevant statutory frameworks for each field of Appropriate Dispute Resolution and provides national and international examples of the application of the relevant principles. Addressing the fields of Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR), criminal law, civil law, business management, psychology, employment law, humanresource management, and African studies, it will appeal to a wide readership.
The book aims to help people understand ADR mechanisms and the advantages of settling disputes using means other than litigation. It presents Traditional African Methods of Settling Disputes (TAMSD), Early Dispute Resolution (EDR), arbitration, negotiation, ODR, collaborative law, restorative justice, conciliation, ombuds, and early neutral evaluation as viable alternatives. It also highlights the need for clinical legal education and effective messaging that highlights the benefits of ADR compared to traditional litigation. In turn, it analyses the use of ADR, especially mediation and collaborative law, to settle disputes in criminal law, restorative justice, employment law, and business and human rights due diligence/violation cases. Further, the book demonstrates that criminal matters are now under the scope of ADR via Restorative Justice Door.
The book discusses the skills, techniques, and relevant statutory frameworks for each field of Appropriate Dispute Resolution and provides national and international examples of the application of the relevant principles. Addressing the fields of Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR), criminal law, civil law, business management, psychology, employment law, humanresource management, and African studies, it will appeal to a wide readership.
Schlagwörter
Podcast
Access to Justice
the UK and the US
Court-Connected ADR
Multi-Door Court House
Mediation and Arbitration
Dispute Settlement in Nigeria
Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)
Traditional Forms of Dispute Settlement
Pre-Colonial Method of Settling Dipsutes
Alternative Types and Forms of Dispute Resolution
Biografische Anmerkung
Dr. Chinwe Egbunike-Umegbolu is a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Nigeria. She is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (AFHEA), a Research Fellow at the University of Brighton (UOB) and a Fellow of the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution (Mediation Committee). Chinwe graduated with a Merit in LLM-Dispute Resolution at Kingston University London in 2014 and holds a PhD from the University of Brighton.