HNLR Online Article

What Are We Learning About Convening Peace in a Pandemic?: Authors Lisa Dicker and Danae Paterson Reflect on their Spring 2020 Article

Authors Lisa Dicker and Danae Paterson of “Covid-19 and Conflicts: The Health of Peace Processes During a Pandemic” spoke with HNMCP to dig more deeply into the article’s findings, provide a behind-the-scenes look into how they translated real-time developments into broader questions and learnings, and share an update on where these peace processes stand eight months into the pandemic. To read the full interview, click here. Interview excerpt:  HNMCP: Let’s rewind back to spring 2020. You […]

ADR, Arbitration, Featured Articles, HNLR Online Article, Lead Article

Forced into Employment Arbitration? Sexual Harassment Victims are Saying #MeToo and Beginning to Fight Back—But They Need Congressional Help

Samuel D. Lack   Abstract   As awareness of the prevalence and pervasiveness of workplace sexual harassment has grown in the United States, so too has the use of mandatory arbitration clauses in employment contracts, shepherding employee claims out of courtrooms and into private arbitration proceedings. Though private arbitration is often touted as cheaper and more efficient than traditional litigation, employees are significantly less likely to win in arbitration and, when they do, their awards

Featured Articles, HNLR Online Article, Lead Article

How Litigation Funders Have Improved the Quality of Settlements in America

Robert B. Fuqua Abstract Litigation finance is a form of specialty funding used by litigants and law firms to pay the high costs associated with maintaining a legal claim. In a typical agreement, a litigation funder pays a portion of a client’s litigation expenses in exchange for a share of the lawsuit’s recovery. The loan is non-recourse, so if the client loses the case, the funder will lose the investment. This form of legal financing

Conflict Management, HNLR Online Article, Lead Article, Negotiation

“Behind-the-Table” Conflicts in the Failed Negotiation for a Referendum for the Independence of Catalonia: A Student Note by Oriol Valentí i Vidal

By Oriol Valentí i Vidal* Spain is facing its most profound constitutional crisis since democracy was restored in 1978. After years of escalating political conflict, the Catalan government announced it would organize an independence referendum on October 1, 2017, an outcome that the Spanish government vowed to block. This article represents, to the best of the author’s knowledge, the first scholarly examination to date from a negotiation theory perspective of the events that hindered political

HNLR Online Article, Lead Article, Mediation

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

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