Arbitration & Mediation - A Comparisson
Arbitration & Mediation - A Comparisson
Arbitration & Mediation - A Comparisson
B R I TA N N I A N E W S
JUNE 2007
In England there has been a significant growth in interest in the use of mediation to
resolve commercial disputes. Commercial mediation has gone through the archetypal path
for acceptance of new ideas: initially they are ignored, if they persist they may be treated
with suspicion (even hostility) and then, suddenly, they are orthodox and part of
mainstream thinking. By Rhys Clift, Partner at Hill Dickinson LLP solicitors in London.
Over the last 10 years, particularly since the
implementation in 1999 of the new Civil
Procedure Rules, there has been a cultural
shift in the management of disputes. Law
firms now have dispute resolution
departments, not litigation departments;
the focus on the actual handling of disputes
(familiarity with the rules and procedures of
arbitration; knowledge of the Commercial
Court Guide) has shifted emphatically to
trying to resolve the dispute. Mediation is
both a key feature and a key driver in this
cultural change.
What explains the successful rise of
mediation? There are several reasons: it is
quick, it preserves relationships, it saves
money and, quite simply, it works. The
success rate (settlement rate) in mediation is
very high. It is believed that about 75% or
80% of cases settle either on the day, or
shortly after. It is an astonishingly effective
B R I TA N N I A N E W S
Note
Much of the ground touched on in this article
is expanded and clarified in a paper published
by Rhys Clift entitled Introduction to Alternative
Dispute Resolution: A Comparison between
Arbitration and Mediation which is available on
the firms website at www.hilldickinson.com