Early Neutral Evaluation

Early Neutral Evaluation
Author: Wayne D. Brazil
Publisher: American Bar Association
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Compromise (Law)
ISBN: 9781614383147

This valuable guide is a tool to teach lawyers, litigants, and judges what early neutral evaluation (ENE) consists of, why and under what circumstances it can be used most productively, the difference between it and mediation (in the forms most commonly encountered by litigants and lawyers), and how clients, litigators, and neutrals have been assessed the value of ENE.

Judging Civil Justice

Judging Civil Justice
Author: Hazel G. Genn
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2010
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0521118948

A trenchant critique of developments in civil justice that questions modern orthodoxy and points to a downgrading of civil justice.

Just, Speedy, and Inexpensive?

Just, Speedy, and Inexpensive?
Author: James S. Kakalik
Publisher: RAND Corporation
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780833024725

Culmination of five-year study of effects of Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990.

Beyond the Adversarial System

Beyond the Adversarial System
Author: Helen Stacy
Publisher: Federation Press
Total Pages: 196
Release: 1999
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781862871533

Australia is presently seeking to streamline its civil justice system. It is popular folklore that the Australian civil justice system is inaccessible to 'ordinary people' as it is expensive, slow and complex. The reasons for these alleged failings are attributed to various causes, such as arcane and inefficient judicial practices, money-hungry lawyers or, more fundamentally, to the very underpinnings of civil litigation - adversarialism. This volume confronts this folklore. It provides perspectives about civil justice from its major user and funding source (government) and the group of Australians who have used it the least and feel most alienated from the system (indigenous Australians). It explores the insights of those who work with adversarialism day in and day out (judges and lawyers) and reveals both defenders and strident advocates for change. Finally, it steps back and gives an outsider's view of Australian adversarialism from those with knowledge of a sister system in the United States.