Index >> Legal Information >> Dispute Resolution




ADR Chambers International
ADR Chambers International (ADRCI) is leading Canadian organization that specializes in international arbitration and mediation. Through the use of the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules as supplemented by its own state of the art rules, ADRCI provides practitioners and their clients uniformity and credibility in the field of the international arbitration and mediation.


ADR Chambers, UK
ADR Chambers is the UK arm of a worldwide alternative dispute resolution group which has successfully settled tens of thousands of cases around the globe, from Canada to Hong Kong, over the last decade. The site has been developed to provide you with as much information as possible about Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR).


ADR Resources
The site contains substantial on-line materials for alternative dispute resolution and mediation.


American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution
The Section of Dispute Resolution is one of the ABA's newest and fastest growing sections with over 19,000 members. The Section's objectives include maintaining the ABA's national leadership role in the dispute resolution field; providing information and technical assistance to members, legislators, government departments and the general public on all aspects of dispute resolution; studying existing methods for the prompt and effective resolution of disputes.


Campus Conflict Resolution Resources
The primary objective of the Campus Conflict Resolution Resources project is to significantly increase administrator, faculty, staff and student awareness of, access to, and use of conflict resolution information specifically tailored to the higher education context.


CRInfo
Conflict resolution information source.


Mediate.com
Mediate.com offers large directory of mediators and over 5,000 articles and resources on negotiation, mediation and collaboration.


U.S. Department of Justice Office of Dispute Resolution
The Office of Dispute Resolution is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice, and is responsible for promoting and facilitating the broad and effective use of alternative dispute resolution processes by the Department of Justice and throughout the Executive Branch of the federal government. The site provides background and an overview of alternative dispute resolution in the federal government and the Department of Justice.