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Power Imbalances in Mediation: A student note by Amrita Narine

By Amrita Narine*

In recent years, mediation has become increasingly popular and now represents a viable option for parties in a variety of scenarios. Despite its rising popularity, mediation has received mixed responses because of the potential to entrench preexisting power imbalances. This paper will explore the usefulness of mediation when dealing with an imbalanced power dynamic.

In part I, this paper will focus on defining power within mediation. Part II will explore the critiques of mediation in situations where there is an imbalanced power dynamic and specifically delve into gendered imbalances and employment imbalances. After exploring the critiques and responses to them, part III will focus on specific techniques that a mediator can use to help balance out the power dynamics at play and offer best practices for dealing with power imbalances.

Read the full paper here.

*Amrita Narine is a third year JD student at Harvard Law School. She currently serves as the Managing Editor for the Harvard Negotiation Law Review and previously served as Submissions Editor. She graduated summa cum laude from the Macaulay Honors Program at CUNY Baruch where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology and Corporate Communications.

Comments

  1. Evan Guthrie says

    29 July, 2017 at 11:44 am

    Very interesting topic. Will check out the full paper.

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Negotiation, not adjudication, resolves most legal conflicts. However, despite the fact that dispute resolution is central to the practice of law and has become a “hot” topic in legal circles, a gap in the literature persists. “Legal negotiation” — negotiation with lawyers in the middle and legal institutions in the background — has escaped systematic analysis.

The Harvard Negotiation Law Review works to close this gap by providing a forum in which scholars from many disciplines can discuss negotiation as it relates to law and legal institutions. It is aimed specifically at lawyers and legal scholars.

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