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Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Coming of Age (2000-2009)

Edited by: Art Hinshaw, Andrea Kupfer Schneider, Sarah Rudolph Cole

ISBN13: 9780197784518
To be Published: December 2025
Publisher: Oxford University Press USA
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £105.50



The U.S. judicial system is not merely a system of trials but a system of alternative means to resolution. Highlighting dispute resolution scholarship emphasizes the diverse ways of thinking available for resolving conflicts beyond traditional trials. In their first volume, Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Foundational Articles (OUP 2021), the authors celebrated the field's foundational writings and reflected on what makes those pieces so significant. In this second volume, Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Coming of Age (2000-2009), they focus on the 16 most significant and influential articles on U.S. dispute resolution during its golden age of extraordinary growth. These articles shaped legal thinking about how the judicial system outsources the resolution of civil claims.

The heart of the book consists of short excerpts from these significant pieces, distilling them to their core ideas: the concepts, phrases, or findings that made them noteworthy. Four leading dispute resolution scholars (sometimes including the original author) then engage with different aspects of the articles' ideas, recognizing their prescience and critiquing them where appropriate to answer the question: Why is this a significant work in the field?

By highlighting these influential works, the authors bring a fresh perspective, challenge them with the benefit of hindsight, engage with themes discussed in the first volume (such as disputant autonomy, access to justice, equal justice, changing views of legal and legalistic processes, and systemic impacts on processes and disputants), and compare the challenges of this era to those of the founding era.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , USA
Contents:
Introduction

PART 1: INTERVIEWING AND COUNSELING
Article 1.1: Good Lawyers Should Be Good Psychologists: Insights for Interviewing and Counseling Clients (2008)—Jean R. Sternlight and Jennifer K. Robbennolt
Comments:
Erin Archerd—(Ir)rational Thinking and the Law
Gilat Bachar—More (Than) Just Lawyering
Lauren Newell—Interviewing and Counseling with Gen Z
Jean R. Sternlight and Jennifer K. Robbennolt—Maybe We Can Fill That Glass

PART 2: NEGOTIATION
Article 2.1: When People are the Means: Negotiating with Respect (2001)—Jonathan R. Cohen
Comments:
Jennifer Brown—“Respect” in Negotiation (and Other Persuasive Relationships)
Noam Ebner—Big-E Ethics and little-e ethics in Negotiation
Jennifer Reynolds—More Meta, More Problems
Jonathan R. Cohen-The Ethical Duty to Listen and Consider
Article 2.2: Aspirations & Settlement (2002)—Russell Korobkin
Comments:
Michael Colatrella—The Complexity of High Aspirations
Noam Ebner—Embracing Messiness in Negotiation Theory
Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff—Modeling Hope: Economic Aspirations in Negotiation
Russell Korobkin—Aspirations in Negotiation: Descriptive and Prescriptive
Article 2.3: Shattering Negotiation Myths: Empirical Evidence on the Effectiveness of Negotiation Style (2002)—Andrea Kupfer Schneider
Comments:
Cynthia Alkon—Shattering Negotiation Myths and Building New Foundations
Alyson Carrel—Shaping the Future of Law Starting by Shattering Negotiation Myths
Katrina Lee—Enduring Impact: Portrait of the Effective Lawyer Negotiator
Andrea Kupfer Schneider—Was Getting to Yes Getting it Right?
Article 2.4: Apologies and Legal Settlement: An Empirical Examination (2003)—Jennifer K. Robbennolt
Comments:
Jacqueline N. Font-Guzmán—The Power of Apologies and the Pursuit of Justice...
Dwight Golann—Do Apologies Matter in Civil Litigation? And If They Do, Why Are They So Rare?
Oladeji M. Tiamiyu—Robbennolt's Analysis of the Contextual Role and Value of Apologies in Legal Settlement
Jennifer K. Robbennolt—Developing an Empirical Understanding of Apologies in Law

PART 3: MEDIATION
Article 3.1: Making Deals in Court-Connected Mediation: What's Justice Got To Do with It (2001)—Nancy A. Welsh
Comments:
Hiro Aragaki—Making It Real
Deborah Thompson Eisenberg—Mediation and Procedural Justice: Where Are We Now?
Jacqueline Nolan-Haley—Revisiting Deals and Justice in Court-Connected Mediation
Nancy A. Welsh—Procedural Justice and Settlement
Article 3.2: Court-Connected Mediation in General Civil Cases: What We Know from Empirical Research (2002)—Roselle L. Wissler
Comments:
Lydia Nussbaum—Empiricism Undaunted
Peter R. Reilly—Insights from a Dispute Resolution Empiricist: Preparation, Fairness, and Party Empowerment in Mediation
Rachel A. Viscomi—A Mirror to Help Us Improve: Reflecting on Roselle Wissler's Court-Connected Mediation in General Civil Cases: What We Know from Empirical Research
Roselle L. Wissler—We Have More to Learn About Mediation from Empirical Research
Article 3.3: Suing Mediators (2003)—Michael Moffitt
Comments:
Rishi Batra—Suing Mediators - A Lack of Liability Hurts Us All
Sharon Press—Revisiting Suing Mediators
Omer Shapira—The Significance of Suing Mediators
Michael Moffitt—Twenty Years After Suing Mediators
Article 3.4: Disputing Irony: A Systematic Look at Litigation about Mediation (2006)—James R. Coben and Peter N. Thompson
Comments:
Ellen E. Deason—Praise (and Gentle Criticism) for Using U.S. Litigation Statistics to Praise (and Gently Criticize) Domestic and International Mediation Policy Choices
Art Hinshaw—Is Litigation about Mediation Ironic?
Andrew Mamo—Embracing Irony
James R. Coben and Peter N. Thompson—Disputing Irony Revisited

PART 4: ARBITRATION
Article 4.1: Managerial Litigants? The Overlooked Problem of Party Autonomy in Dispute Resolution (2000)—Sarah Rudolph Cole
Comments:
Carli Conklin—Enduring Questions of Authority, Integrity, Consistency, and Predictability in Judicial Review of Arbitral Awards
Brian Farkas—The Heart of It: Dispute Resolution's Private-Public Tension
Rafael Gely—A Dispute Systems Design Perspective on Managerial Litigants? The Overlooked Problem of Party Autonomy in Dispute Resolution
Sarah Rudolph Cole—How Should Courts Review Managerial Litigants' Procedural Rulemaking?
Article 4.2: As Mandatory Binding Arbitration Meets the Class Action, Will the Class Action Survive? (2000)—Jean R. Sternlight
Comments:
Richard Bales—The Lasting Significance of Jean Sternlight's 2000 Article in Contemporary Dispute Resolution
Alexander J.S. Colvin—When Mandatory Binding Arbitration Met the Class Action: Why We Were Right to Worry
Maureen A. Weston—Strategic Shifts: The Corporate Playbook on Arbitration, Class Actions, Mass Arbitration, and Privatized Justice
Jean R. Sternlight—What Happens When King Kong Meets Godzilla?: Using Mandatory Arbitration Clauses to Eliminate Class Actions
Article 4.3: Saturns for Rickshaws: The Stakes in the Debate Over Predispute Employment Arbitration Agreements (2001)—Samuel Estreicher
Comments:
Michael Z. Green—The Brilliance of Explaining Mandatory Arbitration as a Choice Between Saturns and Rickshaws
E. Gary Spitko—Employment Arbitration Heresies
W. Mark C. Weidemaier—What Cars Should be Allowed on the Road?
Samuel Estreicher—Employment Arbitration: Towards a Hearing on the Merits for Most Americans
Article 4.4: In Defense of Southland: Reexamining the Legislative History of the Federal Arbitration Act (2002)—Christopher R. Drahozal
Comments:
Jill I. Gross—The Danger of Binary Thinking: Drahozal on Southland
Imre Stephen Szalai—The Real Southland Decision: Drahozal's Trailblazing Article
Stephen J. Ware—Drahozal's Defense of Southland
Christopher R. Drahozal—In Defense of Southland: Arbitration Law, Federalism, and Legal Scholarship

PART 5: SYSTEMIC ISSUES
Article 5.1: Possibilities for Collaborative Law: Ethics and Practice of Lawyer Disqualification and Process Control in a New Model of Lawyering (2003)—John Lande
Comments:
Debra Berman—Collaborative Law: Questioning a Novel Process
Kristen M. Blankley—Ethical Alarm Bells Surrounding Collaborative Law Lead to Solid Foundation for Practice
Kelly Browe Olson—Collaborative Law and IPV Concerns
John Lande—Possibilities for Early Dispute Resolution
Article 5.2: The Vanishing Trial: An Examination of Trials and Related Matters in Federal and State Courts (2004)—Mark Galanter
Comments:
Lisa Blomgren Amsler—Galanter's Systemic Analysis of How Repeat Players Reduced Trials
Yael Efron—The Effects of Marc Galanter's Worldwide Legacy on Legal Practice, Scholarship, Education, and Society
Sheila Heen—Marc Galanter: Everything, Everywhere, All at Once
John Lande—The Phenomenon Known as The Vanishing Trial
Article 5.3: An Analytic Framework for Dispute Systems Design (2009)—Stephanie Smith and Janet Martinez
Comments:
Grande Lum—Don't Just Love the Playa, Love the Game: Appreciating An Analytic Framework for Dispute Systems Design
Carrie Menkel-Meadow—A Systematic Approach to Dispute Systems Design: Commentary on An Analytic Framework for Dispute Systems Design
Guillermo Garcia Sanchez—Global Impact and Legacy: Smith and Martinez' Framework for International Dispute System Design
Stephanie Smith and Janet Martinez—Dispute System Design: Where We've Come From and Where We're Heading

Conclusion