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Home > Law School History & Archives > Event Posters > ADR_EVENTS

Alternative Dispute Resolution - Past Events

 
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  • The Edelman - Townley Lecture | Collective Bargaining and New York City by Monu Singh

    The Edelman - Townley Lecture | Collective Bargaining and New York City

    Monu Singh

    September 18, 2024

  • THE STEVEN C. BENNETT ANNUAL PROGRAM | Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration by New York Law School

    THE STEVEN C. BENNETT ANNUAL PROGRAM | Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration

    New York Law School

    April 17, 2024

    MODERATOR: Jeffrey Zaino, Vice President, American Arbitration Association

    Jennifer Lupo, Lupo Law, Arbitration and Mediation, PLLC

    Richard Mattiaccio, Chartered Arbitrator

    Dana MacGrath, MacGrath Arbitration

    Richard Silberberg, Dorsey & Whitney LLP

    David C. Singer, SingerADR Neutral Services

    Steven Skulnik, Thomson Reuters

  • The "NextGen" Bar Exam: Will ADR Become a More Central Part of the Core Curriculum by New York Law School

    The "NextGen" Bar Exam: Will ADR Become a More Central Part of the Core Curriculum

    New York Law School

    Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) practitioners and teachers have long bemoaned the absence of topics such as negotiation, mediation, and client counseling on the multistate bar exam. Now, the inclusion of these topics on the "NextGen" bar exam may stimulate their instruction in the law school core curriculum. Will it? If so, how? And would that be a good thing?

  • ADR AND DIVERSITY by New York Law School

    ADR AND DIVERSITY

    New York Law School

    January 24, 2024

    This annual event explores the reasons why, in a diverse economy driven by diverse participants, the practice of arbitration and mediation has been persistently homogeneous. Participants will examine approaches that can accomplish the goal of ADA neutrals' reflecting the diversity of the disputants with whom the work.

  • Developments and Trends in Domestic and International Arbitration: What Practitioners Need to Know by New York Law School

    Developments and Trends in Domestic and International Arbitration: What Practitioners Need to Know

    New York Law School

    November 15, 2023

    Despite the absence of statutory amendment, the law of arbitration continues to evolve in ways that were difficult to predict a generation ago. As Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of the American Arbitration Association, Eric P. Tuchmann '94 is in a unique position to synthesize the various developments in the United States and abroad and to offer his observations on what has happened and what is to come.

  • International Arbitration and New York City by New York Law School

    International Arbitration and New York City

    New York Law School

    Wednesday, October 25, 2023

    Join us for a panel about the New York International Arbitration Center. Our panelists will explain and discuss key developments in international arbitration with a New York/United States nexus

  • Culture: What Is It? How Does It Influence Negotiation and Mediation? by New York Law School

    Culture: What Is It? How Does It Influence Negotiation and Mediation?

    New York Law School

    Wednesday September 27, 2023

    Culture is an aspect of the dispute resolution process that is gradually receiving more attention. But what exactly does culture mean in this context? Is cross-cultural dispute resolution a subject of interest only in the international setting, or is it also seen in the domestic context?

    Professor llhyung Lee of the University of Missouri will address these questions and encourage a more deliberate consideration of the culture component.

  • The Steven C. Bennet Annual Program | Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration by New York Law School

    The Steven C. Bennet Annual Program | Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration

    New York Law School

    April 18, 2023

    Six arbitration experts return for their annual and provocative discussion of some of the most pressing challenges facing arbitrators. Topics include the delicate balance between the muscular arbitrator and party autonomy; interesting updates to the AAA Commercial Rules; and greener arbitrations.

  • Sports Arbitration: Past and Present by New York Law School

    Sports Arbitration: Past and Present

    New York Law School

    Tuesday, March 28, 2023

    Join us for a panel exploring the history of baseball arbitration and other sports arbitration issues. We'll also address the dispute resolution methods for determining player compensation in Major League Baseball and the National Football League.

  • Moving Attention to Conflict Upstream: Dispute Prevention in Business Relationships by New York Law School

    Moving Attention to Conflict Upstream: Dispute Prevention in Business Relationships

    New York Law School

    February 21, 2023

    Much attention has been paid to resolving business disputes with deal partners out of court, but the theory and practice of dispute prevention remains in its infancy. This presentation will discuss moving attention to conflict upstream in commercial relationships and offer a sampling of mechanisms that have proven effective in a variety of industries.

  • ADR and Diversity by New York Law School

    ADR and Diversity

    New York Law School

    January 26, 2023

  • Investor / State Arbitration: Past, Present, and Future by New York Law School

    Investor / State Arbitration: Past, Present, and Future

    New York Law School

    October 19, 2022

    An informed panel explains how multibillion-dollar conflicts between nations and foreign investors arise, how they are adjudicated, and how they might be dealt with in the future.

  • GETTING TO MAYBE: The Intersection of ADR and Adult Learning by New York Law School

    GETTING TO MAYBE: The Intersection of ADR and Adult Learning

    New York Law School

    Mediators facilitate dialogue and communication among parties in conflict to move them toward are solution of their own making. But communication is a two-way street, and what we intend to communicate is not always what is received and processed by the listener. In order to interpret, integrate, and understand information, adults engage in a process of sense-making.

    In this discussion, Theodore K. Cheng, Adjunct Professor, New York Law School, and Diane Rosen, Counsel, Herrick Feinstein LLP, will examine how mediation participants ingest, digest, and make meaning of information. The two experts will explore how adults learn and process communications to help create opportunity and potential for parties to consider possibilities and alternatives for resolving their differences

  • Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration by New York Law School

    Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration

    New York Law School

    Six arbitration experts return for their annual and provocative discussion of some of the most pressing challenges facing arbitrators and mediators. Topics include: damages awards in arbitration and awarding higher quantum than requested; award writing styles and impact on enforceability; selecting the panel chair; and how parties and arbitrators can reduce cost and enhance efficiency.

  • BASEBALL ARBITRATION: PAST AND PRESENT by New York Law School

    BASEBALL ARBITRATION: PAST AND PRESENT

    New York Law School

    This panel will explore the history of baseball arbitration and its practical use in the sport today. The panel will also address the dispute resolution methods for determining player compensation used in Major League Baseball.

  • THE ROLE OF CONFLICT MANAGEMENT SKILLS IN POLICING by New York Law School

    THE ROLE OF CONFLICT MANAGEMENT SKILLS IN POLICING

    New York Law School

    This panel will address programs that train police officers to recognize manageable conflict and exercise skills in defusing confrontation.

  • ADR AND DIVERSITY by New York Law School

    ADR AND DIVERSITY

    New York Law School

    This annual event will explore the reasons why, in a diverse economy driven by diverse participants, the practice of arbitration and mediation has been persistently homogeneous. Participants will seek to frame real-world recommendations on approaches that can accomplish the goal of ADR neutrals’ reflecting the diversity of the disputants with whom they work.

  • PERSONAL INJURY ADVANCED MEDIATION TRAINING by New York Law School

    PERSONAL INJURY ADVANCED MEDIATION TRAINING

    New York Law School

    TOPICS Identifying Key Stakeholders • Mediator Preparation and Party Submissions • Decision Trees • Issues in Auto, Premises, Construction, Professional Liability, and Product Cases • Navigating Multi-Party Mediations • Liens and Other Mediation Speed Bumps • Ethical Considerations and Implicit Bias • Simulations and Faculty Guided Mock Mediation Sessions

  • RESTORATIVE JUSTICE WORK IN NON-CRIMINAL JUSTICE SETTINGS IN NEW YORK by New York Law School

    RESTORATIVE JUSTICE WORK IN NON-CRIMINAL JUSTICE SETTINGS IN NEW YORK

    New York Law School

    Restorative justice practitioners will discuss their work in various contexts, including public schools, city government, workplace disputes, intimate partner violence, and pre-trial settlement discussions in civil court. Participants will learn about a range of applications of restorative justice, how and when it can be implemented within systems and outside of them, and what resources are available.

  • PUBLIC ADR EVENTS by New York Law School

    PUBLIC ADR EVENTS

    New York Law School

  • THE ROLE OF MEDIATION IN LAW ENFORCEMENT: Training, Diversion, Mediation, and Other Processes by New York Law School

    THE ROLE OF MEDIATION IN LAW ENFORCEMENT: Training, Diversion, Mediation, and Other Processes

    New York Law School

    This panel will address alternative community interventions for law enforcement including mediation and other non-confrontational processes.

  • MEDIATION PROGRAMS IN FEDERAL COURTS IN NEW YORK by New York Law School

    MEDIATION PROGRAMS IN FEDERAL COURTS IN NEW YORK

    New York Law School

    Leaders of the mediation programs of the Southern District of New York, the Eastern District of New York, and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals join this roundtable discussion of how mediation works in their court, answering questions such as: Who are the mediators? Do non-staff mediators get paid? What are the consequences of failure to mediate in good faith? What are the statistical outcomes of court-ordered mediation, and how do those outcomes compare with private, voluntary mediation? What changes might be expected now that virtual mediation is so frequently practiced and so broadly accepted?

  • ADVANCED COMMERCIAL MEDIATION TRAINING by New York Law School

    ADVANCED COMMERCIAL MEDIATION TRAINING

    New York Law School

  • Conversations in Conflict Resolution by New York Law School

    Conversations in Conflict Resolution

    New York Law School

  • Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration by New York Law School

    Cutting Edge Issues in Commercial Arbitration

    New York Law School

    Six arbitration experts return for their annual and provocative discussion of some of the most pressing challenges facing arbitrators and mediators. Topics include: challenging diversity issues that make some uncomfortable to discuss; the most controversial topics from the New York State Bar Association Resolution Roundtable blog; and civility among members of a tribunal.

 
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