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Foreclosing on Communities? Mediating Common Interests in Home Foreclosure

Foreclosing on Communities? Mediating Common Interests in Home Foreclosure. Phyllis E. Bernard, M.A., J.D. Professor of Law and Director, Center on Alternative Dispute Resolution Oklahoma City University School of Law. Why talk about community when it’s a private home foreclosure?.

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Foreclosing on Communities? Mediating Common Interests in Home Foreclosure

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  1. Foreclosing on Communities?Mediating Common Interests in Home Foreclosure

    Phyllis E. Bernard, M.A., J.D. Professor of Law and Director, Center on Alternative Dispute Resolution Oklahoma City University School of Law
  2. Why talk about community when it’s a private home foreclosure? Economic terms of foreclosure may be affected by non-economic factors There may be value in identifying and engaging non-party stakeholders to support the negotiation of foreclosure These stakeholders include, especially, neighbors in the community where the property is located.
  3. Financial conflict can become identity conflict On personal, individual, family levels On community levels We have seen this before in the farm crisis of the 1980s. Mental and emotional health of individuals and rural communities impacted by farm foreclosures Led to development by USDA of farmer-lender mediation program
  4. Signs of community stress in urban-suburban foreclosures In some areas of the country, neighborhoods have been stressed not only by the physical loss of viable properties, But by the sense of class (and sometimes ethnic) strain.
  5. The American Mythos Meets American models of Justice and ADR A dot? Or a circle? What difference does it make?
  6. What does this represent?
  7. The myth of the American pioneer, homesteading in the west – solitary, stalwart, needing no one
  8. What does this represent?
  9. The Embedded Stratification of American Society – which often defeats SUSTAINED organization for Change CLASS AGE GENDER “RACE” RELIGION REGION
  10. Consider how this self-image interacts with models of ADR The heroic “loner” – pioneer defending his farmstead with a shotgun Relying only upon his immediate family, Needing and wanting no one else as part of his life Solitary problem-solving Mediation model based on Privacy Isolation Exercise of individual power Pursuit of individual interests Bearing individual burdens and benefits
  11. Consider how stratification affects models of Justice – and role of ADR Severe imbalance of power between parties Class actions or other sustained litigation efforts Legislative branch (hearings; funding with strings attached; legislation) Executive branch regulatory interventions Cannot organize along lines of class, without being cut off by lines of “race,” etc. Cannot organize along lines of region without being cut off by lines of gender, etc. Without a public voice, can there be private justice?
  12. The Tribal Peacemaking Model: Oklahoma, Niger Delta, USDA? “The Circle Need Not be Broken” – Theme for the Tribal Peacemaking Program of the Comanche Nation, Oklahoma circa. 1998
  13. Circles of influenceLoose relationshipsFormal bonds One lesson learned from my experiences in tribal peacemaking and community mediation in Oklahoma and Nigeria suggest that there are benefits to opening the mediation, instead. This alternative model engages a number of persons connected to the parties, the neighborhood, and civic associations to identify common concerns affected by foreclosure.
  14. There will almost always be another person or group with an interest in the issue who can help bring about a resolution that works for both - allows them to save face – and will be supported or enforced through group involvement Life moves not in isolation
  15. What group interest in individual loss? Why should neighbors care? Physical deterioration of abandoned or near-to-foreclosure properties, Declining housing prices, Rising crime rates, Increases in domestic violence Increases in neighbor-to-neighbor violence Loss of bonds of community life – memories, support, emotional protection – otherwise known as “quality of life.”
  16. We’ve been here before – USDA Farmer-lender mediations “Boom and bust” economy Predatory lending practices Brokers/lenders who befriended farmers/homeowners Sudden loss of value Inability to pay mortgage when due Dissolution of family life, community life “Ghost towns”
  17. Multiple Participants in USDA mediation
  18. What other lives are touched? Farmer-lender probably attend the same church Their children probably attend the same school They share many friends in common Men may serve on the Rotary Club, Kiwanis, Lion’s Club, or fraternal lodge Women may serve together in women’s auxiliaries, Parent-Teachers Associations, churchwomen’s clubs Analogs to African age cohorts? Analogs to Native American clans?
  19. The article I wrote for as a Fellow of the National Association of Administrative Law Judges, “The Administrative Law Judge as a Bridge Between Law and Culture” first presented the village peacemaking model I developed with the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) in the oil-producing regions of the Niger Delta. The paper, published in the Journal of the National Association of Administrative Law Judges (Pepperdine Law School) lays out the initial adaptation using village women as peacemakers working toward the best interests of the individuals and community.
  20. Homeowners Associations and Mediated Foreclosures “What touches one, touches all” – Igbo proverb
  21. The Homeowner’s Association The modern iteration of the village or clan Formal or informal? Loose relationships can become better established Likely follow actions already underway Create a forum for neighbors to assist, moderate, or at least understand the terms of the foreclosure insofar as they affect the other homeowners Consider: value of retaining renters?
  22. Questions? Comments? Prof. Phyllis Bernard pbernard@okcu.edu or phyllis_bernard@sbcglobal.net
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