|
ARBITRATION
AND MEDIATION
The material provided on the
211 eLibrary is for informational purposes
only. It is not intended to be and should not
be construed as legal advice.
WHAT IS ARBITRATION?
Arbitration is a legal technique
for the resolution of a dispute outside of the
court system by a third party, who reviews the
case and imposes a decision that is legally
binding for both parties.
- Arbitration can be either
voluntary or mandatory and can be either
binding or nonbinding. Non-binding arbitration
is similar to mediation, though the mediator
will try to help the parties find a middle
ground on which to compromise. The non-binding
arbitrator remains removed from the settlement
process and will only give a determination of
liability.
- Arbitration is also known as
alternative dispute resolution, because it
offers the parties to the dispute an
alternative to taking the dispute to a court
of law.
WHAT IS MEDIATION?
Mediation services aims to assist
two (or more) disputants in reaching an
agreement. The parties themselves determine the
conditions and settlements reached, rather than
having a third party impose a decision. A form
of alternative dispute resolution or
"appropriate dispute resolution".
- Mediation may be employed in
many types of disputes, including, but not
limited to:
- family matters
- workplace
- environmental
- land-use
- personal injury
- landlord/tenant disputes
- youth issues
For information on Connecticut's
Mediation Program/Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR), see State
of Connecticut Judicial Branch
TO FIND PROVIDERS IN CONNECTICUT'S
COMMUNITY RESOURCES DATABASE:
Search by service names:
--------------
RESOURCES: Wikipedia
Encyclopedia
PREPARED BY: 211/kq
CONTENT LAST REVIEWED: February2013
|