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Arbitration and Mediation as Alternatives to Court (From Symposium on Judicial Reform, Philip L Dubois, ed. - See NCJ-84719)

NCJ Number
84723
Journal
Policy Studies Journal Volume: 10 Issue: 4 Dated: (June 1982) Pages: 712-726
Author(s)
C A McEwen; R J Maiman
Date Published
1982
Length
15 pages
Annotation
Advocates of mediation and arbitration claim their superiority to adjudication in three areas: reduction of court caseloads and costs; increase in accessibility of justice; and improvement in the quality of justice.
Abstract
Available evidence shows that mediation and arbitration neither lower court costs (though they increase court capacity), nor substantially expand access to justice. By some measures, however, mediation provides fairer outcomes and, in civil cases, higher rates of compliance than does adjudication. Though less effective than often claimed in reducing problems of administering justice, mediation and arbitration -- in their distinctive ways -- do thus offer modestly effective alternatives to court. (Author abstract)

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