PDRS

Mediation | Training | Consulting

  • About PDRS
    • About Mediation
    • Staff
    • Client Feedback
  • About Mediation
    • How Mediation Works
    • Propriety Survey
    • Schedule A Mediaton
  • Training
    • Become a Mediator
    • Basic Mediation Courses
    • Corporate Training Courses
    • Continuing Education Courses
    • Suggested Reading
  • Consulting
  • Upcoming Courses
  • PDRS Forum
  • Contact Us

After Assault, Some Campuses Focus On Healing Over Punishment

July 26, 2017 By Jenni Berz

On-campus disciplinary processes for assaults that are reported have drawn criticism from both survivors and those accused of assault. According to federal statistics, only about one in six survivors of sexual assault on college campuses report the incident to school authorities.

So some campuses are considering a new approach. The process, called “restorative justice,” looks more like a therapeutic intervention aimed at healing than a trial focused on guilt and punishment. Campus administrators are increasingly open to it, despite concern from some activists that it’s too soft on perpetrators of sexual assault.

Read the full article HERE

Filed Under: Front Page, News

August Continuing Education Courses

July 7, 2017 By Jenni Berz

August 2:  Mediation Law, Ethics and More  Click here to register.

August 17:  The Efficacy of Mediation in Business Conflict

 

Upcoming Courses:

Changing the Paradigm: Mediation and Church Conflict Resolution

Attorney’s Guide to the TN Parenting Plan

Parents’ Guide to the TN Parenting Plan

Can I Snitch Now?

 

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

Professionals Complete Mediation Course

May 25, 2017 By Jenni Berz

Congratulations to recent graduates of our General Civil and Family Mediation courses.  We had a diverse group of professionals that included attorneys, judges, HR professionals, therapists, counselors and educators.

Each brought to the week-long training a valuable skill set and worked tirelessly to obtain and practice the skills needed to become quality mediators and negotiators.

 

Filed Under: Front Page, News, Uncategorized

Interest Based Approach to Workplace Conflict

March 30, 2017 By Jenni Berz

Many of us see conflict as a sign of failure—especially in a workplace setting. When conflict begins to contaminate that setting, we have many choices about how to resolve it.  Enjoy this article by distinguished mediator, educator and author Steve Erickson.

IPMA News 8-10 ARTICLE

Filed Under: Forum, Front Page, News

Why We Should Care About Civil Mediation

August 14, 2016 By T.S. Oliver

Why should anyone who is not in the legal profession or the mediation business care about alternative dispute resolution? Here are few reasons why everyone should get to know this kind of conflict management. But first, let’s take a look at what mediation is…and isn’t.

The American Bar Association gives us this mediation definition:

“Mediation is a process in which an impartial third party facilitates communication and negotiation and promotes voluntary decision making by the parties to the dispute.   Mediation serves various purposes, including providing the opportunity for parties to define and clarify issues, understand different perspectives, identify interests, explore and assess possible solutions, and reach mutually satisfactory agreements, when desired.”

The bottom line – mediation gives parties equal footing in the resolution of their dispute. And most mediation is the result of a court order, making ADR a great alternative than going to court. Rather than have a judge or an arbitrator hand down a judgment, ADR by a professional mediator focuses on exploring the issues that led to the dispute and finding areas of agreement that are going to last.

Mediation is not Arbitration. Arbitration is basically like hiring a private judge. Here’s a brief video on the difference between mediation and arbitration provided by the Indiana State Courts:

http://youtu.be/KLdia39awl0

Here are four reasons you should consider mediation before you (or your attorney) file a lawsuit:

  1.  Mediation resolves your problems…now! The U.S. legal system is built to drag litigation on. This is, in part, because of a lack of staff and resources. But is also because our legal framework assumes that there is an imaginary battle of opposing forces. There is the good versus evil, the innocent and the guilty. Court is about adversaries and is designed to find guilt. But civil cases that go to court often are more complex.
  2. Mediation costs are much, much lower than litigation. At around $250 per hour, mediation can settle disputes in one day, and often in one morning. Think five hundred dollars or a grand is a lot of money to settle a dispute? Think about how much work the disputant’s lawyers will but into a case that could last a year or more. They bill at $300 per hour and up. Mediation saves all those legal fees, which is why many lawyers fear mediation. And value of saving sleepless nights…priceless.
  3. Mediation, by nature, collaborative. Beyond the resolution of legal conflict, mediation gets to the core of differences between the interested parties. Most times, conflict is about something other than what is in dispute. In mediation these are called “underlying issues.” Think about divorce mediation or dispute resolution between partners in a small business. Is the problem really about who gets the blue couch? Trained mediators get to the heart of the dispute and find core issues.
  4. Mediation goes beyond courts. All the mediation techniques that work in heading off lawsuits also work outside of the legal system. Alternative dispute resolution methods are used in corporations, non-profit organizations, governments and in international diplomacy.

Now the trick is to convince attorneys that mediation’s benefits outweigh all those billable hours. And if you are an attorney who understands the value of mediation, the trick is to find trained mediators who will follow its best practices.

Private Dispute Resolution Service offers mediation, mediation training and conflict resolution services to those who want to manage conflict in their legal affairs, their organizations and their lives.

 

Filed Under: Forum, Front Page, News

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • Next Page »
Is mediation right for your matter?
Take our propriety survey

PDRS Forum

  • PDRS Awarded PEMF Grant
  • Upcoming Courses
  • The Art of Using the TN Parenting Plan
  • NEW MEDIATION PLAN TARGETS BACKLOG OF CASES IN TENNESSEE COURTS
  • Eleven Questions Most Commonly Asked About Mediation

Stuff of Interest

  • PDRS Awarded PEMF Grant
  • Upcoming Courses
  • The Art of Using the TN Parenting Plan
  • NEW MEDIATION PLAN TARGETS BACKLOG OF CASES IN TENNESSEE COURTS

Featured

PDRS Awarded PEMF Grant

Upcoming Courses

Full PDRS Forum

Connect with Us

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Private Dispute Resolution Services, LLC
5800 Building
5708 Uptain Road, Suite 1200
Chattanooga, TN 37411

Tel: 423.266.4050
Fax: 423.756.1845

[email protected]

Copyright © 2025 · Private Dispute Resolution Services, LLC.