FRANCHISE MEDIATION & ARBITRATION SERVICES
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Ten Things an Arbitrator Hates about Arbitration— With Apologies to William Shakespeare and Heath Ledger By Arthur L. Pressman, Arthur L. Pressman Dispute Resolution Services, LLC

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Secrets in Plain Sight: What a Mediator Sees that You May Not. How to Maximize Your Opportunity to “Win” at Mediation. By Arthur L. Pressman, Arthur L. Pressman Dispute Resolution Services, LLC

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Secrets in Plain Sight: What a Mediator Sees that You May Not. How to Maximize Your Opportunity to “Win” at Mediation.

Switching chairs from advocate to mediator affords a new perspective. As Michael Dady and others have reminded us over the years, what you see depends on where you sit (or stand). Conduct that I once thought was useful during my 40 years as an advocate, I now see as counter-productive as a full-time neutral. From where I sit as a mediator of franchise disputes, here’s a list of mediation behaviors lawyers should engage in to increase the likelihood of resolution.

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SCOTUS speaks: closing the gaps between international and domestic arbitrations, non-signatories may seek to enforce arbitration agreements

Ending a nagging circuit split and narrowing differences between domestic and international arbitration, the Supreme Court has now made it easier for non-signatories to enforce international arbitration agreements in GE Energy Power Conversion France SAS v. Outokumpu Stainless USA LLC, No. 18-1048, 2020 WL 2814297 (U.S. June 1, 2020). In doing so, the Court healed a two-way split in four Circuit Courts of Appeal and made international arbitration agreements under the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the New York Convention), 21 U.S.T. 2517, T.I.A.S. No. 6997, more like domestic agreements under the Federal Arbitration Act (the FAA), 9 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-16 (West 2020). If a non-signatory to an international arbitration agreement can show that it has a sufficiently strong connection to a signatory, it will now have standing to enforce that agreement in a United States court much as it would with respect to a domestic arbitration agreement.

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Covid19 has changed the face of litigation, mediation and arbitration

Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) or Virtual Dispute Resolution (VDR) is now the new normal for attorneys, parties, and neutrals alike. I’m happy to help you reach resolution in your case either via Zoom or telephonically. Call or email me today to learn about the choices available for us to work together. If you need a Zoom tutorial to utilize this medium for your cases, please feel free to let me know and I’ll arrange for a Zoom consultant to work with you directly.

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The Importance of Trust in the Mediator

In franchise disputes, lawyers and parties who search for mediators drill down on mediators' professional backgrounds, often paying the most attention to whether potential mediators have previously represented franchisors or franchisees. Despite the fact that lawyers generally don't choose their clients - clients choose lawyers - everyone, or most everyone, wants to know if a lawyer being considered as a mediator in a franchise dispute has been identified with franchisors or franchisees.

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Lessons Learned: International Style Mediation vs. US-Style Mediation

But there’s a big difference between court proceedings and mediation that explains in part at least why the US lawyer speaks while the client listens – it’s because in court, the rules only allow a client to speak from the witness stand, and then only in response to questions. In court, the lawyer’s license to practice is the lawyer’s license to speak, generally to the exclusion of the client except as witness.

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ISO The Perfect Mediator; Other Characteristics Considered

Before social media, the personals column found at the back of New York Magazine was where readers sought potential mates or more, often beginning their ads, as they were called back then, with the three letter acronym “ISO,” meaning “in search of.” As readers of the ABA Forum on Franchising ListServ know, today’s posters often ask for help in finding potential mediators, albeit rarely with the ISO introduction. While geography sometimes prompts their questions (“Does anyone know a mediator in Dubuque?”), other times members identify the chief characteristics they seek in a mediator. For example, recently there’s been a spate of emails on the ListServ looking for a “strong” mediator.

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A Modest Proposal

Last night was the final class meeting of my Negotiation section at Boston University School of Law for the Spring term, and we had a mediation exercise that involved all 20 of my students – four teams each consisting of a mediator, 2 lawyers and 2 clients. The interesting thing about my class is that none of the students is from the United States – each is a young lawyer from another part of the world -- China, Peru, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Taiwan, Qatar, and Belgium – enrolled in BU’s LLM in American Law program.

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