Home > Law Journals > JDR > Vol. 2019 > Iss. 2 (2019)
Abstract
As technology impacts every aspect of our lives, all professions are exploring how to benefit from use of technology. Mediation is no exception. Since the mid-1990s, the field has explored applying technology to resolve conflict. At an early point this exploration narrowed in on substituting physical convening with wholly-online processes. Conflating “technology” with “online,” however, left an entire practice area unaddressed, a gap we need to mind: application of technology to support traditional, in-person mediation processes. Indeed, today, most mediation processes are largely bereft of technology. This Article suggests that by not minding the gap, traditional mediation forgoes opportunities to improve its processes and its outcomes. Furthermore, it risks rendering the mediation profession and process unappealing to the next generation of potential clients and mediators. Conversely, by minding—and closing—the technological gap by incorporating helpful technologies into mediation practice and process, the field can realign with the changing characteristics of mediators and parties, and thrive. This Article details ways in which technology can support inperson mediation, highlights areas of mediation practice particularly ripe for technological support, and suggests mindsets for considering technological solutions to mediation challenges. Finally, it suggests areas in which applying technology to mediation might help the field progress past some of its historical challenges and impasses.
Recommended Citation
Alyson Carrel and Noam Ebner,
Mind the Gap: Bringing Technology to the Mediation Table,
2019 J. Disp. Resol.
(2019)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/jdr/vol2019/iss2/5