Face-to-face negotiation is the preferred communication style for negotiation, as it is the richest form of communication (Daft & Lengel, 1986), allowing for words, gestures and body language to be clearly communicated. This form of communication also allows for instant feedback, essential in negotiation when it is imperative to check understanding of each other’s views and priorities. Bodtker and Jameson (2001) argue that experiencing emotion is one way we recognize conflict. Invariably, dispute resolution involves emotion, which if allowed to flood the substantive issues, otherwise known as emotional flooding, may result in disputants incapable of acting rationally (Jones & Bodtker, 2001), which may lead to unfair solutions. For example, in high-stress negotiations of family disputes, it may be difficult to think rationally about both the disputants and children’s future needs. This may lead to people having to live with a less-than-ideal financial situation that is not representative of their future needs. Online dispute resolution (ODR) systems involve the use of technology to aid (or in some instances to replace) human communication in the dispute resolution process. This means replacing a very rich form of communication with a lower form of media, with the lowest being text-based forms of communication. ODR using video-conferencing technology benefits disputants located in different areas, hence providing a good medium for those who geographically cannot meet in person. While also a fairly rich mode of communication, this type of technology is heavily dependent on infrastructure variables, such as Internet speed, application support and connectivity issues, which are not always available. In this article, we will introduce the concept of how ODR can support face-to-face negotiations by re-introducing our software AssetDivider as a method to support the face-to-face process in negotiation. |
Search result: 47 articles
Year 2018 xPart II Private Justice |
How Online Negotiation Support Systems Empower People to Engage in MediationThe Provision of Important Trade-off Advice |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | ODR programs, empowerment, online negotiation support systems, technology |
Authors | Emilia Bellucci and John Zeleznikow |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Part I Courts and ODR |
Testing the Promise of Access to Justice through Online Courts |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | online courts, empirical research, civil justice, access to justice |
Authors | Bridgette Toy-Cronin, Bridget Irvine, David M. Nichols e.a. |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Modernization is increasingly knocking on the courthouse door. Many common law countries are investigating ways to introduce technology to improve civil courts, including the introduction of online courts. These state-led initiatives are primarily focused on lowering state costs in providing justice, as well as increasing access to dispute resolution. One possible solution some legal jurisdictions are exploring is ‘online courts’. Online courts hold the promise of making justice more accessible and affordable: a dispute can be filed at any time, from anywhere, by anyone. This model of delivering justice is envisioned as a system that either is lawyer-less or has a minimal role for lawyers. One of the assumptions underpinning an online court is, therefore, that laypeople can effectively explain a dispute to the court, without legal assistance. To date, there is no empirical research investigating that assumption. In this article, we will outline the proposed online court model, consider the need for robust empirical research, and describe a three-part investigation to explore how clearly and accurately people can explain a dispute. |
Part II Private Justice |
Using Technology and ADR Methods to Enhance Access to Justice |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | ODR, ADR, mediation, online court, e-court, consumer ADR, CADR, CDR, ombudsman |
Authors | Pablo Cortes |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article discusses how technology and extrajudicial processes can provide a solution to the access-to-justice problem for self-represented litigants. The article first observes the need for efficient dispute resolution processes based on a wider concept of access to justice and argues for greater integration amongst courts and extrajudicial bodies, especially in the consumer sphere where dispute resolution bodies are currently undergoing an institutionalization process as a result of recent EU legislation. Accordingly, it is argued that access to justice for consumers will only be achieved if they have access to either an accountable and effective extrajudicial scheme that offers adjudication or a truly user-friendly and accessible online court that incorporates alternative dispute resolution techniques as the United Kingdom has endeavoured to deliver. To that end, this article examines the policy options for the English Online Court with a particular focus on the challenges faced by litigants in person. Finally, this article submits that dispute system design changes need to be informed by empirical research and a holistic policy strategy on dispute resolution. |
Part I Courts and ODR |
Recent Development of Internet Courts in China |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | Internet court, ODR, AI, blockchain, regulation, fourth party |
Authors | Xuhui Fang |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Online dispute resolution (ODR) is growing out of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) and pushing the envelope for resolving online disputes in the Internet courts in China. Recently, the Chinese Internet courts admitted blockchain-based evidence and applied artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, big data and virtual reality (VR) technology. The rapid development of Internet courts in China has implications for regulating AI-related technologies, which are playing the role of the ‘fourth party,’ and the interplay between the ‘third party’ and the ‘fourth party.’ |
Part II Private Justice |
Decentralized Justice in the Era of Blockchain |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | ODR, blockchain, arbitration, decentralization, crowdsourcing |
Authors | James Metzger |
AbstractAuthor's information |
ODR that is built on blockchain technology and infrastructure is championed by supporters as being capable of revolutionizing dispute resolution. Kleros is a decentralized dispute resolution platform built on the Ethereum blockchain that uses cryptoeconomic theories and game theory to recruit and incentivize a worldwide pool of ‘jurors’ to decide the cases arbitrated through the platform. This article discusses some early evaluations of whether this kind of decentralized ODR is likely to succeed by viewing the model through a normative framework, including considering whether crowdsourcing of justice on a decentralized platform is a viable way to conduct ODR. The article then discusses the likelihood of the success of the sub-court model, including whether choice-of-law issues might be problematic for a worldwide, decentralized system. Finally, the article considers whether the cryptoeconomic and game theories that provide the foundation for the Kleros platform are likely to result in a jury pool, much less an actual jury, that could be considered ‘fair.’ The article is informed by the author’s experience with the Kleros platform through participation in its interactive initial coin offering and engaging in its beta-testing phase. |
Part II Private Justice |
Making ODR HumanUsing Human-Centred Design for ODR Product Development |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | online dispute resolution, courts and tribunals, human-centred design, legal tech, legal design, user testing, user-centred design, machine learning, alternative dispute resolution, product development |
Authors | Luke Thomas, Sarah Kaur and Simon Goodrich |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article discusses what we as human-centred design practitioners have learnt from researching and designing online dispute resolution (ODR) products both for clients and as part of our internal research and development initiatives. |
Article |
A Proposal for the International Law Commission to Study Universal Criminal Jurisdiction |
Journal | African Journal of International Criminal Justice, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Keywords | Universal Criminal Jurisdiction, International Criminal Law |
Authors | Mr. Charles Chernor Jalloh |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The principle of universal jurisdiction is a unique ground of jurisdiction in international law that may permit a State to exercise national jurisdiction over certain crimes in the interest of the international community. This means that a State may exercise jurisdiction regarding a crime committed by a foreign national against another foreign national outside its territory. Such jurisdiction differs markedly from the traditional bases of jurisdiction under international law, which typically require some type of territorial, nationality or other connection between the State exercising the jurisdiction and the conduct at issue. Due to the definitional and other ambiguities surrounding the universality principle, which has in its past application strained and today continues to strain relations among States at the bilateral, regional and international levels, this paper successfully made the case for the inclusion of “Universal Criminal Jurisdiction” as a topic in the long-term programme of work of the International Law Commission during its Seventieth Session (2018). It was submitted that taking up a study of this timely topic, which has been debated by the Sixth Committee of the UN General Assembly since 2010, could enhance clarity for States and thereby contribute to the rule of law in international affairs. It will also serve to continue the ILC’s seminal contributions to the codification and progressive development of international criminal law. |
Legal Document |
Summary record of the 10th meeting – A/C.6/73/SR.10Agenda item 87 |
Journal | African Journal of International Criminal Justice, Issue 1-2 2018 |
Article |
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Journal | Erasmus Law Review, Issue 4 2018 |
Keywords | maritime security services, Italian hybrid system, military and private personnel, use of force, relation with the shipmaster |
Authors | Giorgia Bevilacqua |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The sharp increase of piracy attacks in the last two decades was followed by a parallel increase of demand in the maritime security sector. A plenty of flag States around the world have started to authorize the deployment of armed security guards, either military or private, aboard commercial ships. In 2011, Italy also introduced the possibility of embarking armed security services to protect Italian flagged ships sailing in dangerous international waters. Like the other flag States’ legal systems, the newly adopted Italian legislation aims to preserve the domestic shipping industry which was particularly disrupted by modern-day pirates. On the other hand, the doubling of approaches of the Italian legal and regulatory framework, initially privileging military personnel and then opting for the private solution, took the author to investigate the main relevant features of the Italian model of regulation and to analyze the recent developments of the domestic legal practice on counterpiracy armed security services, focusing on the role that customary and treaty obligations of international law played for the realization at national level of on-board armed protection of Italian ships. The use of lethal force at sea and the relationship between the shipmaster and the security guards will receive specific attention in this article. |
Report |
The 2018 Manfred Lachs Space Law Moot Court CompetitionCase Concerning Conflicting Activities in Outer Space, Planetary Protection, and Outer Space Security (The Democratic Republic of Neapilia v. The Republic of Kalvion) |
Journal | International Institute of Space Law, Issue 12 2018 |
Authors | Melissa K. Force |
Author's information |
Article |
Religious Garment as Public Security Risk in the European UnionAfraid of Clothes? |
Journal | Hungarian Yearbook of International Law and European Law, Issue 1 2018 |
Authors | János Tamás Czigle |
Author's information |
Conversations on restorative justice |
A talk with Daniel Van Ness |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 3 2018 |
Authors | Albert Dzur |
Author's information |
Article |
Restorative justice as feminist practice |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 3 2018 |
Keywords | Restorative justice, gender-based violence, feminism |
Authors | Leigh Goodmark |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Feminists have viewed the implementation of restorative practices warily, particularly in the context of gender-based harms. Concerns include the devaluing of gender-based harms, the reprivatisation of violence against women and the inability of restorative practitioners to guarantee safety for people subjected to abuse. But this article will argue that restorative justice can be a uniquely feminist practice, growing out of the same mistrust of state-based systems and engagement of the community that animated the early feminist movement. Although some caution is warranted, restorative justice serves the feminist goals of amplifying women’s voices, fostering women’s autonomy and empowerment, engaging community, avoiding gender essentialism and employing an intersectional analysis, transforming patriarchal structures and ending violence against women. |
Book Review |
Adolescent violence in the home: restorative approaches to building healthy, respectful family relationship |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 3 2018 |
Authors | Michael G. DeAntonio PhD |
Author's information |
Article |
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Journal | Erasmus Law Review, Issue 2 2018 |
Keywords | empirical legal research, Europe, popularity, increase, journals |
Authors | Gijs van Dijck, Shahar Sverdlov and Gabriela Buck |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Empirical Legal research (ELR) has become well established in the United States, whereas its popularity in Europe is debatable. This article explores the popularity of ELR in Europe. The authors carried out an empirical analysis of 78 European-based law journals, encompassing issues from 2008-2017. The findings demonstrate that a supposed increase of ELR is questionable (at best). |
Article |
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Journal | Erasmus Law Review, Issue 2 2018 |
Keywords | evidence-based, regulation, proportionality, empirical law studies, law and society studies |
Authors | Rob van Gestel and Peter van Lochem |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Studies have shown that the effects of scientific research on law and policy making are often fairly limited. Different reasons can be given for this: scientists are better at falsifying hypothesis than at predicting the future, the outcomes of academic research and empirical evidence can be inconclusive or even contradictory, the timing of the legislative cycle and the production of research show mismatches, there can be clashes between the political rationality and the economic or scientific rationality in the law making process et cetera. There is one ‘wicked’ methodological problem, though, that affects all regulatory policy making, namely: the ‘jump’ from empirical facts (e.g. there are too few organ donors in the Netherlands and the voluntary registration system is not working) to normative recommendations of what the law should regulate (e.g. we need to change the default rule so that everybody in principle becomes an organ donor unless one opts out). We are interested in how this translation process takes place and whether it could make a difference if the empirical research on which legislative drafts are build is more quantitative type of research or more qualitative. That is why we have selected two cases in which either type of research played a role during the drafting phase. We use the lens of the proportionality principle in order to see how empirical data and scientific evidence are used by legislative drafters to justify normative choices in the design of new laws. |
Article |
Smart EnforcementTheory and Practice |
Journal | European Journal of Law Reform, Issue 4 2018 |
Keywords | regulatory inspections, regulatory enforcement, environmental regulations, smart regulation |
Authors | Dr. Florentin Blanc and Prof. Michael Faure |
AbstractAuthor's information |
There is an increasing attention both on how inspections and enforcement efforts with respect to regulatory breaches can be made as effective as possible. Regulatory breaches refer to violations of norms that have been prescribed in public regulation, such as, for example, environmental regulation, food safety regulation or regulation aiming at occupational health and safety. The enforcement of this regulation is qualified as regulatory enforcement. It has been claimed that inspections should not be random, but based on risk and target-specific violators and violations. Such a “smart” enforcement policy would be able to increase the effectiveness of enforcement policy. Policy makers are enthusiastic about this new strategy, but less is known about the theoretical foundations, nor about the empirical evidence. This article presents the theoretical foundations for smart enforcement as well as some empirics. Moreover, the conditions under which smart enforcement could work are identified, but also a few potential limits are presented. |
Article |
Plain LanguageA Promising Tool for Quality Legislation |
Journal | European Journal of Law Reform, Issue 4 2018 |
Keywords | plain language, clarity, precision, accessibility, interpretation |
Authors | Kally K.L. Lam LLB |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The hypothesis of this article is that plain language drafting with innovative drafting techniques can improve the quality of legislation. Further to this, the article tries to prove that quality legislation can also make the law more accessible to its general audience. With regard to quality, the article assesses plain language drafting with innovative drafting techniques using Helen Xanthaki’s criteria of quality in legislation, i.e. that it should be clear, precise and unambiguous. With regard to accessibility, it is defined broadly as to include readability. I will first assess whether plain language drafting with innovative drafting techniques can meet the expectations of its general audience and second discuss whether legislation drafted in plain language with innovative techniques passes the usability tests. |