Academic literature on the topic 'Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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Rasyid, Abdul. "Relevance of Islamic Dispute Resolution Processes in Islamic Banking and Finance." Arab Law Quarterly 27, no. 4 (2013): 343–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15730255-12341267.

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Abstract In the Islamic legal system, the ways in which disputes are resolved generally fall under two categories. The first category is through litigation, namely in Islamic courts (al-qaḍāʾ or adjudication), and the second is through amicable means such as negotiation, conciliation and compromise (naṣīḥah or sincere advice), mediation (ṣulḥ), arbitration (taḥkīm), mediation along with arbitration (ṣulḥ and taḥkīm), an ombudsman (muḥtasib), expert determination (Mufti’s fatwā, pl. fatāwā), etc. These mechanisms are called alternative dispute resolution (ADR) that refers to a range of dispute resolution processes which are alternative to traditional litigation. Over time, the term ADR is now coming to mean ‘appropriate dispute resolution’ or the most appropriate resolution process in the given circumstances. One of the principal goals of ADR is to provide parties with choices for the effective and efficient resolution of disputes. The above-mentioned dispute resolution processes have different characteristics. This article will discuss only the relevant mechanisms with a view to examine how far they may be suitable to resolve Islamic banking and finance disputes effectively, cheaply and quickly.
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Nufaris Elisa. "The Resolution of International Trade Disputes through Arbitration." Britain International of Humanities and Social Sciences (BIoHS) Journal 2, no. 1 (2020): 296–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.33258/biohs.v2i1.191.

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If an international trade dispute occurs, so that the ways of resolution can be reached through non-litigation (alternative litigation) or Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). The facilities classified as ADR other than Arbitration facilities as contained in Article 6 of Law No. 30 of 1999 concerning Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution which includes facilities including Meditation facilities, Negotiation facilities, Consolidation facilities, and other facilities. Based on the Arbitration Law it provides an opportunity to resolve trade disputes through the Arbitration institution and it is very appropriate if this institution has a very important role in resolving disputes that occur in the world of international trade. The scope of disputes which can be tried in a trial of the International Commercial Arbitration institution must be related to the issue of trade, finance and general trading (commerce), while those relating to other matters have nothing to do at all.
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Noone, Mary Anne, and Lola Akin Ojelabi. "Alternative dispute resolution and access to justice in Australia." International Journal of Law in Context 16, no. 2 (2020): 108–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1744552320000099.

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AbstractIn the last four decades, there has been a significant increase in the number and variety of appropriate dispute-resolution (ADR) institutions and processes in Australia as a critical aspect of improved access to justice. Although more people can get assistance to resolve their disputes, the issues of whether this access is shared equally within the community, how the disadvantaged fare in these processes and what type of justice is provided by the various ADR processes are explored. The relevance of legislative objectives of ADR fora and processes to justice outcomes is highlighted. It is argued that ADR processes need to be designed and implemented bearing in mind the type/nature of the dispute, parties involved and availability of resources, and to have an overarching objective of promoting access to justice for users. Additionally, improved access to justice requires ongoing and rigorous evaluation of ADR processes to ascertain whether justice objectives are being achieved.
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Matthias, Carmel R. "PARAMETERS OF CONFIDENTIALITY IN CHILD PROTECTION ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION." Southern African Journal of Social Work and Social Development 27, no. 3 (2015): 290–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/2415-5829/720.

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It has been internationally recognised that alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is effective in many child protection cases. In the South African Children’s Act, four ADR methods are applicable to child protection. It will be shown that a major weakness in the ADR framework in the Act is a failure to provide appropriate coverage on the crucial aspect of confidentiality. This article explores the tensions around confidentiality in ADR processes for both professional and family participants. Where participants fear that what they divulge during ADR is not confidential, they may be inhibited from being constructively involved. This can defeat the purpose of ADR. On the other hand, in child protection ADR a correct balance needs to be struck so that information essential for the further resolution of the case or for protecting persons from danger is communicated. How best to enable effective child protection ADR by creating an appropriate confidentiality framework is discussed in this article.
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Ahmed, Masood. "Moving on from a judicial preference for mediation to embed appropriate dispute resolution." Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly 70, no. 3 (2019): 331–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.53386/nilq.v70i3.137.

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This paper critically considers judicial approaches to and promotion of mediation within the English civil justice system. It argues that the overzealous judicial emphasis on mediation in the ADR jurisprudence has restricted the wider concepts of ADR and ‘dispute resolution’ which in turn has created what the author terms ‘judicial mediation bias’. The paper critically explores these issues through an analysis of the ADR jurisprudence, with a focus on key Court of Appeal ADR authorities, and successive civil justice reforms. The paper makes proposals for reform, including the potential use of stages one and two of Lord Justice Briggs’ online court to promote a greater application of a variety of ADR procedures, in particular, judicial early neutral evaluation and collaborative dispute resolution.
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Jeretina, Urša, and Alan Uzelac. "Alternative Dispute Resolution for Consumer Cases: Are Divergences an Obstacle to Effective Access to Justice?" Central European Public Administration Review 12, no. 4 (2015): 39–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.17573/ipar.2014.4.a02.

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Traditional court proceedings do not always offer practical and cost-appropriate way of resolving consumer disputes. Some authors consider that, in disputes between consumers and businesses, alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is more effective, faster and cheaper. Insofar, consumer ADR (CADR) is seen as a useful instrument that helps consumers realize their right of access to justice. It is argued that the CADR is a flexible and faster method of enforcement of consumers’ rights, and that CADR systems provide valuable information on the needs of applicants, while preserving confidentiality and increasing consumer satisfaction. However, while praised in theory, the CADR in real life has not reached the desired levels. It seems that both sides, businesses and consumers, lack awareness of ADR schemes and their benefits. In this paper we analyze the concept of CADR through compensatory collective redress, and explore whether current legal initiatives of the European Union (EU) are ultimately contributing to increasing consumer confidence in the internal market of the EU Member States. Special attention is paid to different barriers for the development of various ADR schemes. They are reflected not only in different ADR schemes, but also in the evaluation methods used to measure efficiency of the use of the (C)ADR. The EU Directive on Consumer ADR and Regulation on Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) have attempted to set flexible rules that would assure quality of dispute resolution between entities in the EU. However, the EU initiatives so far leave many questions unanswered, in particulars the questions about supervision and financing of consumer ADR schemes, as well as the issues regarding purely internal harmonization of CADR practices. An example for considerable divergences are CADR proceedings in the neighboring Western Balkan states, such as Slovenia and Croatia.
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Wellington, Alex. "Taking Codes of Ethics Seriously: Alternative Dispute Resolution and Reconstitutive Liberalism." Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence 12, no. 2 (1999): 297–332. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0841820900002253.

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Alternative dispute resolution has the potential to be many things to many people, although it cannot, of course, be everything to everybody. A careful reflection on the appropriate role and scope of alternative dispute resolution will evidence that it has much to offer the legal profession and the legal system. For one thing, it can rejuvenate the practice of law for its practitioners, being both fun and fascinating. It can also help to improve the public perceptions of lawyers, which may be sinking to all time lows. One way of approaching the topic is to suggest that lawyers need alternative dispute resolution—they need it both to enhance their public image and in order to drum up new business opportunities. Another way of approaching the topic is to focus on the contribution of treatments of alternative dispute resolution to the “growth of the modern social scientific study of law.” Studies along these lines may emphasize the development of the Alternative Dispute Resolution movement in terms of attempts to “recast the market for dispute resolution services by different interests attempting to advance their own professional projects.”.Yet a different way of examining alternative dispute resolution is to explore the self perceptions of its practitioners and theorists—what they think it has to offer to its consumers and society at large. Alternative dispute resolution certainly can provide a fertile source of ‘satisfaction’ to the parties to disputes. The “mediation alternative”, for instance, is said to provide a more complex form of ‘satisfaction’, one in which the needs and interests of the parties determine the final outcome. It is not only that there are some disputants—who currently are not aware of, or encouraged to pursue, opportunities to resolve their disputes by negotiation or mediation—who would benefit from access to ADR. It is also that even those who might fail to reach agreement if they tried negotiation or mediation would still benefit from the attempt and may be less likely to be disaffected or disappointed from the adjudicative outcome to their dispute having tried the “other way” beforehand. Perhaps even those who might decline to avail themselves of the option to try ADR even if offered would benefit just from having the choice. All disputants, therefore, benefit to some degree from the processes of ADR being readily available and carried out reliably and responsibly.
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Pely, Doron, and Golan Luzon. "Hybrid dispute resolution model for migrant-host communities." International Journal of Conflict Management 30, no. 5 (2019): 615–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijcma-01-2019-0009.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to locate, describe and analyze the differences between the way migrants from communal cultures and local communities in Western Europe resolve intra-communal and inter-communal conflicts, and to use the findings to propose a hybrid alternative model that may be able to bridge across identified differences. Such a hybrid model will facilitate enhanced integration and adaptation between host and migrant communities, contributing to improved conflict resolution outcomes. Design/methodology/approach This paper starts with an exploration, review and analysis of existing relevant literature describing refugee/migrant–host community interactions and their consequences. The second stage includes review and analysis of relevant alternative dispute resolution (ADR) literature. The third stage undertakes an examination and analysis of the practices identified in stage two, and the fourth stage proposes a method that uses potentially “bridging” practices by incorporating useful and relevant elements from host and refugee communities’ ADR mechanisms, in a way that may help resolve inter-communal disputes. Findings The paper demonstrates significant differences between host and migrant communities’ dispute resolution practices and the integrability of relevant ADR approaches toward creating a usable, hybrid, bridging approach to handle inter-communal conflicts. Research limitations/implications The paper proposes a hybrid “bridging” host–refugee inter-communal conflict management model. The proposed model should be tested to prove feasibility and viability. Practical implications Should the proposed model prove useful, the practical implications may lead to the construction and use of different (hybrid) conflict management mechanisms in appropriate communities. Such mechanisms may lead to a reduction in the number and severity of inter-communal conflicts. Social implications A reduction in inter-communal conflicts within the framework of a host–migrant interface may have strong positive outcome to inter (and intra) communal relations and may reduce friction, crime, marginalization, hostility and radicalization. Originality/value The paper highlights the challenges to both migrant and host communities when it comes to finding a common ground for resolving inter-communal disputes and offers a pragmatic hybrid model to bridge cultural and functional gaps and help promote mutually satisfactory outcomes.
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Abedi, Fahimeh, John Zeleznikow, and Emilia Bellucci. "Universal standards for the concept of trust in online dispute resolution systems in e-commerce disputes." International Journal of Law and Information Technology 27, no. 3 (2019): 209–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijlit/eaz005.

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Abstract The need for an appropriate jurisdiction for electronic commerce disputes has led to the well-established mechanism for solving disputes through the internet known as the Online Dispute Resolution (ODR). Currently, there is no universal agreement about the concept of trust in ODR systems, although this issue has been widely discussed in the field of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). The current study aimed to develop a set of standards to enhance trust and confidence in using ODR systems. In this study, we have adopted a new approach in the ODR field, and no similar research has been conducted. This study used a quantitative (online survey) and mainly qualitative approach (interview) for gathering data. After analysing data, this research identified three elements as standards to measure trust in ODR systems including knowledge, expectations of fairness and code of ethics. Finally, our findings provide several practical and methodological implications.
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Grande, Elisabetta. "Alternative dispute resolution, Africa, and the structure of law and power: the Horn in context." Journal of African Law 43, no. 1 (1999): 63–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002185530000872x.

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Data collected by comparative legal scholars show that legal transplants usually take place from more complex societies to less complex ones. By contrast, the alternative dispute resolution (ADR) movement that has recently developed in modern societies has been described as a return to a simple model of dispute settlement used in the past and in modern non-Western societies. Does this mean that we are experiencing a new kind of legal transplant, a transplant from less complex to more complex societies? In this article I will argue that this is not the case. Far from being a transplant from the southern to the northern hemisphere, ADR seems indeed to be a modern legal institution born from the retreat of the state from some of its traditional functions. A different question thus needs exploring: is ADR, at least, an institution that can easily be transplanted to Africa where the original transplant of the Western state has failed? In other words, is conciliatory ADR more similar to the African way of dealing with conflicts and consequently to be recommended as the dispute resolution mechanism for modern African states? The question appears to be appropriate in situations such as the one in the Horn of Africa—particularly Eritrea—where the new political leadership is confronting the difficult task of building a new legal system.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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Takahashi, Bruno. "O papel do terceiro facilitador na conciliação de conflitos previdenciários." Universidade de São Paulo, 2015. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/2/2137/tde-08042016-165122/.

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A conciliação judicial de conflitos previdenciários envolve, em geral, uma proposta de acordo baseada na renúncia pelo indivíduo de parte dos valores do benefício em atraso em um processo no qual a decisão contrária ao entendimento do Instituto Nacional do Segurado Social (INSS) é muito provável. Como regra, há um notório desequilíbrio de poder envolvendo, de um lado, um litigante ocasional (indivíduo) e, de outro, um litigante habitual (INSS). O presente trabalho pretende discutir qual o papel do terceiro facilitador nesse contexto, de modo a legitimar a prática existente e avançar para uma mudança de paradigma. Para tanto, parte-se da tese de que a conciliação deve ser adequada ao conflito que se pretende tratar, cabendo ao terceiro facilitador atuar de acordo com as peculiaridades desse conflito. Desse modo, propõe-se que, para o tratamento do conflito previdenciário, o conceito de conciliador deve ser entendido em termos amplos, abrangendo não apenas o conciliador leigo, mas também o juiz conciliador e o Judiciário como conciliador interinstitucional. Embora cada uma dessas atuações possua características próprias, sustenta-se que o ponto em comum é o respeito a um devido processo legal mínimo que possibilite a existência de uma base adequada de poder e que permita, assim, a tomada de uma decisão informada pelas partes. Dessa forma, a flexibilidade instrumental própria da conciliação não impediria o estabelecimento de parâmetros mínimos da atuação do conciliador. Por isso, tendo como limite a tomada de uma decisão informada, o conciliador atuaria por meio de estratégias variadas, aproximando-se e distanciando-se das partes, com maior ou menor interferência, de acordo com as características do caso apresentado. Conclui-se que, com a atuação conjunta e coordenada das diversas espécies de conciliador é possível aprimorar qualitativamente a conciliação de conflitos previdenciários.<br>The court-connected conciliation (or evaluative mediation) of pension funds conflicts in Brazil involves, generally, an agreement in which the individual plaintiff waives part of a benefit in a lawsuit that the defendant, a national government agency called Instituto Nacional do Seguro Social (INSS), will probably loose. As a general rule, there is a significant imbalance of power between a one-shotter (individual) and a repeat player (INSS). The present work aims to discuss the role of the conciliator (or evaluative mediator) in this scenario, in order to legitimate the current practice and to allow a paradigm shift. Firstly, it argues that conciliation should be appropriate to the conflict to be resolved and that the conciliator also should act according to the peculiarities of this conflict. Therefore, it proposed that the definition of conciliator might be enlarged to cover not only the lay person who acts as a conciliator, but also the judge as a conciliator and the Judiciary as an interinstitutional conciliator. Although each specie has its own characteristics, it is argued that the common point is that all must try to guarantee the observance of a minimal due process of law which allows the existence of an adequate basis of power and thus enable parties to make an informed decision. Consequently, the flexibility of the conciliation rules would not prevent the establishment of minimum standards of the conciliator\'s performance. Limited by the aim to allow parties to make an informed decision, the conciliator would act through a variety of strategies. It means being close or far from the parties, interfering in a greater or a smaller level, depending on the characteristics of a particular conflict to be dealt. To sum up, this work concludes that, if the three species of conciliator work together in a coordinated way, it could be possible to have a qualitative improvement in the conciliation of pension funds conflicts.
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Sourdin, Tania. "Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) Principles : From Negotiation to Mediation." 名古屋大学大学院法学研究科, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2237/20943.

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Nyakundi, Freda Moraa. "Development of ADR mechanisms in Kenya and the role of ADR in labour relations and dispute resolution." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15173.

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Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) is a vastly growing enterprise in conflict management the world over. Its application in managing labour relations and the attendant disputes has been tested and is well settled. Kenya, in recognition of this phenomenon, has adopted a legal framework making provisions for both ADR and Labour rights in its most supreme law, the Constitution of Kenya, 2010. This informs the theme of the current study. The disciplines that are ADR and labour relations are overwhelmingly extensive. Thus they cannot find conclusive commentary in a single book leave alone a thesis with a predicated word count. This paper is neither a one stop-shop treatise nor an integral text on either disciplines but a comprehensive commentary, on the interplay between ADR and labour relations. Fair treatment has been accorded and care has been borne to neither starve one nor belabor the other. It is a commentary spanning eons, reaching out to the past, tracking development and addressing the prevailing circumstances in respect of ADR's application in labour dispute resolution in Kenya. The rich literature review (books, statutes, conventions, journals, articles) quoted is as informative as it is illuminating, and presents a wealth of knowledge. The overall aim is to assess the place of ADR in labour relations in Kenya and spur academic, intellectual and sector-wise debate on the foregoing.
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So, Shiu Sing David. "Compare the alternative dispute resolution (ADR) used in Hong Kong and Japan construction industry." access abstract and table of contents access full-text, 2006. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/ezdb/dissert.pl?ma-slw-b21843181a.pdf.

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Thesis (M.A.)--City University of Hong Kong, 2006.<br>"Master of Arts in arbitration and dispute resolution, LW6409 dissertation" Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on May 23, 2007) Includes bibliographical references.
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Martins, Nadia Bevilaqua. "ADR in the age of contemporaneity : complexity, chaos and pedagogy /." St. Lucia, Qld, 2003. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe17752.pdf.

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Msokera, Chisomo Harvey. "Appropriate dispute resolution for women married under customary law in Malawi, with special reference to marital violence." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25482.

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As a dispute resolution service provider, the justice system ought to provide effective legal remedies to address the justice needs of people. Apart from having the capacity to provide the legal remedies, the system has to be accessible as well. In marital violence disputes, one of the general interests of both the State and the affected individual spouses is to prevent further abuse. Courts offer this remedy, among others, by imposing restraining orders, which are backed up by punitive threats. On the other hand, facilitative mechanisms of dispute resolution such as mediation do not have the power to impose punishment on contemptuous parties. However, facilitative dispute resolution processes encourage joint problem solving, which is desirable in maintaining a workable relationship between spouses. This research argues that in order to ensure optimum access to justice in marital violence disputes there is a need for a dispute resolution system that offers facilitative and advisory mechanisms of dispute resolution alongside court processes. However, in Malawi, rural citizens face the barriers of language and use of English law-orientated procedures when accessing courts. Furthermore, some customary law practices and statutory law provisions encourage the view that mediation in marital violence disputes precludes concurrent access to court remedies. This research explores the challenges which this current approach to marriage dispute resolution poses to women married under customary law. It answers the question whether the justice system, with its English law-orientated procedures and the tenet of mandatory mediation or reconciliation, offers appropriate and effective mechanisms of resolving marital violence disputes to women married under customary law.
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De, Oliveira Michélle Branco. "Dispute resolution under the general conditions of contract 2010 / Michélle Branco de Oliveira." Thesis, North-West University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/8671.

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In the light of the nature of the construction industry and the fact that it is often burdened with disputes arising from the contract, appropriate and unique alternative dispute resolution procedures are indispensable for disputes to be resolved quickly, efficiently and effectively. Section 34 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 provides for the right to have disputes resolved by means of a public hearing before a court, alternatively, where appropriate, by means of an independent, impartial forum. Arbitration, mediation, conciliation and adjudication, to name but a few, are alternative methods used in resolving South African construction disputes. Some of these alternative dispute resolution (ADR) methods are provided for in the Construction Industry Development Board recommended standard contracts. This study entails an analysis of the ADR methods in construction agreements with specific reference to the General Conditions of Contract for Construction Works 2010 (GCC 2010) and a comparison thereof with the English position. The application of the recommended ADR methods in the South African construction industry, especially adjudication, faces many challenges. There is no certainty as to the definition nor the procedure to be followed in the use thereof. The study concluded that there is a definite need for the contract to be reviewed, in particular the dispute resolution clause. The introduction of on- line dispute resolution was also recommended. This will contribute towards efficient, effective and expedient dispute resolution that is required due to the nature and role of the construction industry in a country‟s economy. There is also a definite need for legislation to be implemented which will assist in clarifying as well as regulating the adjudication procedure as used in the South African construction industry.<br>Thesis (LLM)--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2013
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Luna-Smith, Liana. "Closing the Gap: Identifying and Defining Challenges Faced by Alternative Dispute Resolution Professionals as They Enter the Field." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19351.

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The definitive flexibility, informality, and diversity of use make alternative dispute resolution (ADR) a unique field that deserves the time and effort it will take to determine best practice for establishing it as a true profession. That being said, before we begin the battle for legitimization we must not forget the heart and soul of the field, its practitioners. In the face of the unsure status of ADR as a field, there are many barriers currently affecting potential practitioners of ADR preventing the success of both these new members and the field itself.
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Leung, Brian Ming-yuen. ""What is the role of ADR in the existing and future environmental dispute mechanism in Hong Kong?"." access abstract and table of contents access full-text, 2003. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/ezdb/dissert.pl?ma-slw-b18508315a.pdf.

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Begin, Marc A. "An analysis of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) as it applies to contract dispute settlement and its use by the Defense Industry." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 1999. http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA366326.

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Thesis (M.S. in Management) Naval Postgraduate School, June 1999.<br>"June 1999". Thesis advisor(s): Mark W. Stone, David A. Smith. Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-80). System requirements: Abode Acrobat reader.
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Books on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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Appropriate dispute resolution (ADR) in Ireland: A handbook for family lawyers and their clients. Family Law, 2012.

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M, Nelson Robert. Nelson on ADR. Thomson/Carswell, 2003.

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Hilmer, Sarah E. Annotated bibliography, alternative dispute resolution (ADR). Chinese University Press, 2011.

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Institute, on Continuing Legal Education (1995 Toronto Ont ). ADR: Maximizing mediation. Canadian Bar Association-Ontario, 1995.

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Nihon Bengoshi Rengōkai. ADR (Saibangai Funsō Shori Kikan) Sentā. Saishin ADR katsuyō gaidobukku: ADR-hō kaisetsu to kankei kikan riyō no tebiki. Shin Nihon Hōki, 2006.

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The ADR practice guide: Commercial dispute resolution. 2nd ed. Tottel Pub., 2006.

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Petley, M. C. A. ADR - an introduction to alternative dispute resolution. College of Law, 1992.

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David, Miles, and Marsh William, eds. Commercial dispute resolution: An ADR practice guide. Butterworth, 1995.

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1967-, Yamada Aya, ed. ADR chūsaihō: Law of ADR & arbitration. Nihon Hyōronsha, 2008.

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1943-, Marriott Arthur L., ed. ADR principles and practice. Sweet & Maxwell, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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Blackshaw, Ian S. "Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)." In Mediating Sports Disputes: National and International Perspectives. T.M.C. Asser Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-6704-535-3_3.

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Blackshaw, Ian S. "Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)." In Asser International Sports Law Series. T.M.C. Asser Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-6704-645-9_3.

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Murphy, Ryan, and Frances Burton. "Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)." In English Legal System. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315768526-14.

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Galera, Susana, Pablo Acosta, and Helena Soleto. "ADR Tools in Spanish Administrative Law." In Alternative Dispute Resolution in European Administrative Law. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34946-1_8.

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Tyagi, Neelam. "ADR Institutions, Role of ADR Practitioners, and Frequency of Resolution of Matrimonial Disputes." In Women, Matrimonial Litigation and Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1015-8_4.

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Conradsen, Inger Marie, and Michael Gøtze. "Administrative Appeals and ADR in Danish Administrative Law." In Alternative Dispute Resolution in European Administrative Law. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34946-1_5.

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Boros, Anita, and András Patyi. "Administrative Appeals and Other Forms of ADR in Hungary." In Alternative Dispute Resolution in European Administrative Law. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34946-1_10.

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Tyagi, Neelam. "Matrimonial Disputes and Scope and Benefits of ADR." In Women, Matrimonial Litigation and Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1015-8_2.

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Tyagi, Neelam. "Matrimonial Litigation, Its Aftermath, and ADR Mechanisms in Focus." In Women, Matrimonial Litigation and Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1015-8_3.

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Marrani, David, and Youseph Farah. "ADR in the Administrative Law: A Perspective from the United Kingdom." In Alternative Dispute Resolution in European Administrative Law. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34946-1_9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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Hamid, Mohamed Ishak Abdul. "Knowledge Of Adr: A Critical Success Factor For Effective Dispute Resolution Initiative." In ILC 2017 - 9th UUM International Legal Conference. Cognitive-Crcs, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2018.12.03.3.

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Kasikova, Stanislava. "MEDIATION IN RESOLVING CONSUMER DISPUTES IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR - OVERVIEW OF FOREIGN EXPERIENCE AND OPPORTUNITIES BEFORE THE BULGARIAN MODEL." In THE MEDIATION IN THE DIFFERENT PUBLIC SPHERES 2021. University publishing house "Science and Economics", University of Economics - Varna, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36997/mdps2021.12.

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This article aims to present the legal framework governing the establishment of consumer dispute resolution bodies in Bulgaria and other EU member states, as well as to analyze what should be the place of mediation as a way of alternative dispute resolution. (ADR) in resolving conflicts between traders and consumers.
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Kasikova, Stanislava. "MEDIATION IN RESOLVING CONSUMER DISPUTES IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR - OVERVIEW OF FOREIGN EXPERIENCE AND OPPORTUNITIES BEFORE THE BULGARIAN MODEL." In THE MEDIATION IN THE DIFFERENT PUBLIC SPHERES 2021. University publishing house "Science and Economics", University of Economics - Varna, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36997/mdps2021.136.

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Abstract:
This article aims to present the legal framework governing the establishment of consumer dispute resolution bodies in Bulgaria and other EU member states, as well as to analyze what should be the place of mediation as a way of alternative dispute resolution. (ADR) in resolving conflicts between traders and consumers.
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Olapade, D., B. Aluko, and B. Olapade. "Recovery of Residential Premises through Adoption of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) Techniques: Experience from Lagos, Nigeria." In 18th African Real Estate Society Conference. African Real Estate Society, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15396/afres2018_150.

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Reports on the topic "Appropriate Dispute Resolution (ADR)"

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SAX, B. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). Defense Technical Information Center, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada311045.

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