header-logo header-logo

28 February 2014 / Richard Harrison
Issue: 7596 / Categories: Features
printer mail-detail

Mediation: one size fits all?

web_harrison_0

Richard Harrison addresses some fundamentals of the mediation process

The last redoubt of oratory and rhetoric in legal practice is now to be found in the opening plenary sessions of mediation.

The emotional appeal to the jury to give the poor defendant a chance is now firmly in the past. The magnificent cadences of final speeches in civil claims are rarely heard.

But a day’s mediation is traditionally commenced by a roundtable get-together where the spokesperson for each party gets the chance to put the case at its absolute highest and tell the other side about how dreadfully they have been advised by their own lawyers. This is one chance to wheel out the old advocacy skills.

I have therefore set out to produce a uniform “one size fits all” speech for the busy mediation participant who wants maximum effect from minimum effort. Some may say this is indeed empty rhetoric: I could not possibly comment. I follow it up with a template address from the mediator on the physiological challenges of

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Osbornes Law—Alex McMahon, Andrew Middlehurst & Harriet McMorrin

Osbornes Law—Alex McMahon, Andrew Middlehurst & Harriet McMorrin

Homegrown hat-trick: Osbornes Law promotes three former trainees to partner

mfg Solicitors—Sarah Bradford

mfg Solicitors—Sarah Bradford

Partner arrival boosts law firm’s growing real estate team

Freeths—David Smith

Freeths—David Smith

Freeths secures major tax hire with appointment of David Smith

NEWS
The Supreme Court has clarified the scope of a director’s duty, in a case where a chairman’s good intentions went awry due to the pandemic
Digital fraud is ‘baffling policymakers, investigators, prosecutors and enforcers’, leaving ‘a massive justice gap’, the author of a government-commissioned independent review has warned
Richard Lloyd’s independent review of the Legal Services Board (LSB) has delivered a devastating verdict, accusing the super-regulator of having ‘lost its way in recent years’
The House of Commons has passed the Hillsborough Law, in a historic achievement for campaigners, survivors and families of those who died in the 1989 stadium collapse
Judicial statistics show a steady rise in the number of female judges and Asian and mixed ethnicity judges in the past ten years—however, progress in terms of representation has stalled for both Black lawyers and for solicitors
back-to-top-scroll