Skip to main content
IACM 2022

Full Program »

Pandemic Impacts on Remote Justice


Abstract: Due to COVID-19, many dispute resolution processes shifted to a remote format. This roundtable explores the impact of that shift on facilitation, negotiation, mediation, and arbitration processes, and in specific practice areas, including criminal law and family law. Topics include whether these remote processes achieve just outcomes and how to teach these processes to better prepare practitioners for the future. The discussants share observations and analysis based on their recent experience as advocates, neutrals, and empirical researchers and lessons learned from forcing professionals to rapidly enhance their technological skills during a period of massive disruption. The program examines how agile particular mechanisms have been as well as larger practice areas and whether they have successfully reinvented themselves


Keywords: online, justice, ADR

Topic: MED   |   Format: Roundtable Discussion


Andrea Schneider, Marquette Law School (andrea.schneider@marquette.edu)
United States

Cynthia Alkon, Texas A&M (calkon@law.tamu.edu)
United States

Noam Ebner, Creighton University (noamebner@creighton.edu)
United States

Elayne Greenberg, St. John's University (greenbee@stjohns.edu)
United States

Deborah Eisenberg, Maryland University (deisenberg@law.umaryland.edu)
United States

Kelly Olson, U. Arkansas (kbolson@ualr.edu)
United States

Donna Shestowsky, UC Davis (dshest@ucdavis.edu)
United States

Nancy Welsh, Texas A&M (nwelsh@law.tamu.edu)
United States

 


Powered by OpenConf®
Copyright ©2002-2021 Zakon Group LLC