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“Alternative dispute resolution and non-adversarial regulation: why are they still not mainstream and can they ever beco

Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community. “Alternative dispute resolution and non-adversarial regulation: why are they still not mainstream and can they ever become mainstream? Rick Sarre Associate Professor of Law and Criminology

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“Alternative dispute resolution and non-adversarial regulation: why are they still not mainstream and can they ever beco

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  1. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community “Alternative dispute resolution and non-adversarial regulation: why are they still not mainstream and can they ever become mainstream? Rick Sarre Associate Professor of Law and Criminology Presentation to World Mediation Forum December 2001

  2. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community The question • What is it about formal legal procedures that makes them so attractive, enduring and resilient to change notwithstanding the burgeoning evidence that the alternatives are to be preferred for a host of reasons?

  3. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community ADR and its manifestations • Each of the alternatives came about as more and more people began to recognise the limitations of any approach that brought parties into a highly formalised legal battle, one against the other, where there could be but one winner.

  4. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community 3 somewhat artificial notions assumed for the purpose of making the arguments clearer • Litigation and its alternatives are set out as dichotomous and mutually exclusive entities • Formal adjudications and the adversarial system are irretrievably linked • No distinction is made between court-annexed ADR and non-court-annexed ADR.

  5. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • Certainty • Visibility • Professional pressure • Educational pressure • Law reform complacency • Empowerment • Cultural reasons?

  6. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • The certainty of a judicial pronouncement has deep appeal • There is a strongly held view that legal arguments and formal pronouncements are required in order to develop the law, and in order to give certainty to legal relationships

  7. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • The visibility of, and consistency attached to, an open court hearing is attractive • The New Zealand Cof A recently overruled a family conference outcome, determining that it was too lenient in the punishment it awarded, and arguing that the state had an abiding interest in equalising punishment across offences

  8. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • Litigation serves the purposes of the legal profession • “[The law’s] guardians are a priesthood, who to greater or lesser degrees cling together in mutual self-discipline encouraging or compelling each other to understand, apply and preserve the orthodoxy.” (Keith Mason)

  9. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • The adversarial system is entrenched in the current style of legal education • “For much of the time, the required task is skilfully to piece together small sections of the [jigsaw] puzzle, without ever having to appreciate the entire composite legal picture and its implications for society.” (Ngaire Naffine)

  10. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • Law reformers accept the centrality of the adversarial/litigious approach • Alternatives to litigation are referred to as ‘exceptional’ or ‘alternative’ and thus the perceived immutability of the prevailing assumption remains intact.

  11. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • The adversarial system may assist those who challenge authority and power • A mediated response may be perceived as favouring the interests of the powerful. There is an argument that only through the litigious process can power imbalances be overcome, assuming equal access to resources.

  12. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Reasons for the enduring litigious process • The adversarial system is culturally determining and determined • Blankenburg: ‘legal culture’ is the product of the legal system …concluded by comparing European countries with different attitudes to litigation.

  13. Educating Professionals . Creating and Applying Knowledge . Serving the Community Conclusion • At the very least, there will need to be some attention given to the above issues if there is to be a greater reliance upon, and confidence in, alternative procedures and practices, alternatives that have promised much for some time but which have failed to make the sort of impact that their proponents may have hoped for or predicted in the past.

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