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Mediation
Mediation, a form of alternative
dispute resolution (ADR), also
refers to appropriate dispute
resolution, and aims to assist two
(or more) disputants in reaching an
agreement. Whether an agreement
results or not, and whatever the
content of that agreement, if any,
the parties themselves determine —
rather than accepting something
imposed by a third party. The
disputes may involve states,
organizations, communities,
individuals or other representatives
with a vested interest in the
outcome.
Mediators use appropriate techniques
and/or skills to open and/or improve
dialogue between disputants, aiming
to help the parties reach an
agreement (with concrete effects) on
the disputed matter. Normally, all
parties must view the mediator as
impartial.
Disputants may use mediation in a
variety of disputes, such as
commercial, legal, diplomatic,
workplace, community and family
matters.
Mediation and Conciliation
Much
debate has focused on the
distinction between conciliation and
mediation, and no universal
agreement has emerged.
"Conciliation" sometimes serves as
an umbrella-term that covers all
mediation and facilitative and
advisory dispute-resolution
processes. Neither process
determines an outcome, and both
share many similarities. For
example, both processes involve a
neutral third-party who has no
enforcing powers.
One significant difference between
conciliation and mediation lies in
the fact that conciliators possess
expert knowledge of the domain in
which they conciliate. The
conciliator can make suggestions for
settlement terms and can give advice
on the subject-matter. Conciliators
may also use their role to actively
encourage the parties to come to a
resolution. In certain types of
dispute the conciliator has a duty
to provide legal information. This
helps any agreement reached to
comply with any relevant statutory
framework pertaining to the dispute.
Therefore conciliation may include
an advisory aspect.
Mediation works purely facilitative:
the practitioner has no advisory
role. Instead, a mediator seeks to
help parties to develop a shared
understanding of the conflict and to
work toward building a practical and
lasting resolution.
Several different styles of
mediation exist: evaluative,
facilitative, and transformative.
Evaluative mediation does have
somewhat of an advisory role in that
its practitioners evaluate the
strengths and weaknesses of each
side's argument should they go to
court; whereas facilitative
mediators and transformative
mediators do not do this.
Furthermore, their definitions of
mediation differ in that evaluative
mediation has the main drive and
goal of settlement, while
transformative mediation, in
contrast, looks at conflict as a
crisis in communication and seeks to
help resolve the conflict thereby
allowing people to feel empowered in
themselves and better about each
other. The agreement that arises
from this type of mediation occurs
as a natural outcome of the
resolution of conflict. |