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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Getting A Head Start: More Intake Questions And Tips For Mediators, Marjorie Corman Aaron
Getting A Head Start: More Intake Questions And Tips For Mediators, Marjorie Corman Aaron
Faculty Articles and Other Publications
A party's initial inquiry to a mediator about potentially participating in a case provides many opportunities for the neutral to initiate the steps necessary for a successful resolution. This article focuses on a list of intake questions for the mediator to direct to the parties.
At First Glance: Maximizing The Mediator‘S Initial Contact, Marjorie Corman Aaron
At First Glance: Maximizing The Mediator‘S Initial Contact, Marjorie Corman Aaron
Faculty Articles and Other Publications
First moves matter. A mediator’s strategic choices during the initial contact can encourage the next steps that will produce a successful mediation, or render mediation less likely or less productive.
User Friendly: Informality And Expertise, Annelise Riles
User Friendly: Informality And Expertise, Annelise Riles
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
A Culture Of Conflict: Lessons From Renegotiating Health Care, Leonard J. Marcus
A Culture Of Conflict: Lessons From Renegotiating Health Care, Leonard J. Marcus
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.
Mediating Disputes In Managed Care: Resolving Conflicts Over Covered Services, Nancy Neveloff Dubler
Mediating Disputes In Managed Care: Resolving Conflicts Over Covered Services, Nancy Neveloff Dubler
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.
Alternatives To Economic Sanctions, Christine M. Chinkin
Alternatives To Economic Sanctions, Christine M. Chinkin
Book Chapters
Considering the merits of non-coercive alternatives to economic sanctions inevitably risks the charges of idealism and naIvete. However a number of speakers in this conference have raised considerable doubts about the efficacy of sanctions: even on their own terms sanctions rarely work and the material costs to non-targeted states and the implications for human rights make their justification problematic, even when they can in some sense be said to have worked. It therefore makes sense at least to give consideration to some non- coercive alternatives, either in conjunction with sanctioning policies or separate from them. The other alternative is the …