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Just Court ADR

The blog of Resolution Systems Institute

Author Archive

CRQ Wants You

Susan M. Yates, March 9th, 2010

Ever thought about writing for publication? In the ADR field, I think of writing and reading articles as an integral part of our conversation about how to improve what we do. I know I am especially interested in new, reliable information about what is happening in court ADR. If you have learned something useful about court ADR, I urge you to share it with others.

It seems like there are more journals related to ADR all the time, but one that remains open to anyone in the field is Conflict Resolution Quarterly. (Disclosure: I am on the CRQ Editorial Board.) CRQ is always open to reviewing submissions. (more…)

Poka-Yoke in Court ADR?

Susan M. Yates, February 25th, 2010

Michael Schrage’s Harvard Business Review blog explains the Japanese design insight called poka-yoke – Japanese for “avoid mistakes.” The idea is to design the “simplest, cheapest, and surest way to eliminate foreseeable process errors.” One example he gives is where an assembler uses three screws, so the screws are packaged in groups of three:  the package is a poka-yoke device.

My son’s high school biology teacher tries to use poka-yoke with her students by having all the homework on one color of paper, test prep on another, and so on. Can’t say it always works, but you can’t blame that on the device!

Along with being a nifty name, this made me wonder what poka-yoke are in use and might be designed for court ADR and for mediation in general. (more…)

Welcome!

Susan M. Yates, February 18th, 2010

Welcome to Resolution Systems Institute’s blog: Just Court ADR. I hope the play on words works for you. With this name, we sought to communicate two ideas. First, we are focused on court ADR. We will give ourselves some latitude in how closely the topics we cover relate to court ADR, but, at the core, court-related ADR is our interest. Second, we are interested in fair court ADR systems that provide justice. While there is much discussion about efficiency in court systems, we at RSI believe the underlying quality of court ADR programs is about much more. (more…)

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