Monthly Archives: July 2006

The geography of conflict: a blogger maps out the Middle East for Americans

Mapping the geography of conflictGrasping the devastating impact of violent conflict can be difficult, particularly for Americans who have not experienced ongoing full-out war on U.S. soil since Pearl Harbor. It is hard as well to imagine the land where missiles and mortar fly or to understand the distances between the cities and towns named in this morning’s headlines.

One blogger, Andy Carvin, determined to map out the geography of conflict between Israel and Lebanon and to measure it against the contours of more familiar terrains, has created a short video which overlaps a map of the Middle East with a map of New England to understand better the scale of the distances between the regions. Andy observes,

For Americans who are used to countries being thousands of miles wide, it’s quite astonishing to realize what a compact area of land is affected by the fighting. For example, the distance between Haifa and Beirut isn’t much difference than the distance between Providence, Rhode Island and Lowell, Massachusetts.

You can view Andy’s video at his blog.

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A Coloring Book for Lawyers lampoons the quest for billable hours

Lawyers Coloring BookThose of you who track representations of lawyers in popular culture will want to check out “A Coloring Book for Lawyers” (in PDF), which my son, a Legal Studies and Philosophy major at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, just sent me a link to (hey, thanks, Adamo). (A gold star for everyone who can color inside the lines.)

For additional posts that describe or deconstruct pop culture depictions of attorneys, please visit the following articles from this blog:

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Attention conflict resolution writers: Settle It Now, quarterly dispute resolution journal, issues call for articles

Settle It Now issues call for articlesSettle It Now, a web-based dispute resolution journal which launched earlier this year, has issued a call for articles for an upcoming issue. Settle It Now, published quarterly, was founded by Victoria Pynchon, a California-based attorney-mediator and author of a negotiation blog, Settle It Now Blog Spot. The submission deadline is September 15, 2006.

Vickie Pynchon has asked me to share with my readers the following information about Settle It Now and its inaugural issue:

We have a distinguished Advisory Editorial Board and intend to become one of the five top academic journals of note in the fields of alternate dispute resolution and restorative justice practices, as well as the social, cultural, psychological and political study of conflict. We are looking for articles in the fields of mediation, arbitration, restorative justice, international relations, consensus building and peace activism.

Our first volume (see http://www.settlenow.org) is eclectic in subject matter and international in scope. Robert M. Nelson of the Canadian Gowlings law firm contributed an article on the use of alternate dispute resolution programs in post-Communist societies. Robert Dobbins provided an incisive essay on best practices in drafting mediation and arbitration agreements — the commercial litigation “pre-nup.” Kenneth Cloke graciously allowed us to publish a chapter from his new book, The Crossroads of Conflict. The chapter published, “Mediating Evil, War and Terrorism — the Politics of Conflict”, is an unflinching look at the evil we suffer and the evil we do. Troy Anthony Thomas provided us with a fascinating study of the conflict resolution style and substance of Jesus of Nazareth — a much needed investigation given our nation’s present religious polarization on nearly every critical issue from religious study and practice in the schools, to “intelligent design,” gay marriage, and abortion. How would Jesus have resolved these conflicts in modern society? Finally, Editor-in-Chief Victoria Pynchon included her own article on restorative justice practices in the criminal justice system. She reviews the ways in which former offenders can find peace and purpose in post-offender communities in much the same way that recovering alcoholics have pursued healthy and productive lives through the principles and practices of Alcoholics Anonymous.

Upcoming issues will feature other original articles, essays, book reviews, practice updates and transcripts of programs that are of interest to all those involved in conflict resolution, be they students, volunteers, working mediators, arbitrators, ombuds, psychologists, anthropologists, sociologists or artists.

For further information, you can contact Vickie at vpynchon [at] settlenow.com, or view Settle It Now‘s submission guidelines.

Virtual Chautauqua, an online community learning experience, hosts Appreciative Intelligence author Carol Metzker starting July 15

Virtual Chautauqua provides online learning in a community settingI am continually astonished and delighted by the capacity of the Internet for creating conversations.

Another experiment in building community and conversation online is underway at Virtual Chautauqua, a web site offering an interactive community learning experience.

What is Virtual Chautauqua? This description from the web site explains:

Before Monday Night Football, before talk radio, before web surfing and chat rooms, there was Chautauqua.

At the turn of the century, there were more than 10,000 Chautauqua venues in small towns and rural areas across the United States. People gathered to enjoy the famous authors of the day, the best musical ensembles, and art exhibits usually available only in major cities. After a stimulating presentation, participants wandered back to their porches and living rooms to discuss, debate, and reflect on what they had experienced together. The Chautauqua movement was all about learning in community.

Today, there are only a handful of Chautauqua sites left to provide this unique opportunity to share a rich menu of cultural and educational activities. We can never replace the pleasure of sitting together on the grass and talking long into a summer night. But we can make a time and place for learning in community – even in lives lived on Internet time.

In The Virtual Chautauqua we’re bringing some of the best of this learning tradition online.

July’s program features Carol Metzker, author of Appreciative Intelligence: Seeing the Mighty Oak in the Acorn. Appreciative Intelligence, discussed on this blog back in May, is the ability to see the potential hidden inside of challenges and to reframe problems into possibilities.

To participate in this Chautaqua, which begins on July 15 and runs until the end of this month, you can register for free online. I’m planning on attending as much of the conversation as my schedule will permit, so I hope to see some of you there. For more information on how Virtual Chautauqua works, please visit the Virtual Chautauqua web site.

Yellow Chair Stories: artist uses a wifi connection and one wooden chair to create community

Yellow Chair StoriesThis morning a friend, knowing my interest in the use of digital technology to foster human interaction, forwarded to me a link to the Yellow Chair Stories, one postgraduate art student’s experiment in using a wifi connection and one yellow wooden chair to create some community and conversation in the London neighborhood she lived in.

Anab Jain, as a project for the Royal College of Art, placed a brightly painted wooden chair together with a welcoming sign outside her flat which read, “My Wifi network is open for neighbours and passersby – FREE ACCESS FROM THIS CHAIR!”

Jain explains her experiment in art and social interaction this way:

By placing this sign and a yellow chair outside my house, I conducted a live service design intervention and extended the boundaries of my home to encompass the boundaries of my wireless network.

This ‘grass roots’ design approach illustrates how wireless technologies could become interfaces to recreate transient spaces for conversations at the threshold of the public and the private, the physical and the electronic.

Jain is bringing her work to California to ZeroOne San Jose: A Global Festival of Art on the Edge & the Thirteenth International Symposium of Electronic Art beginning on August 7.

(Thanks, Connie, for the link!)

International Trademark Association announces online ADR competition for EU law students

The International Trademark Association (INTA) has announced that it is sponsoring an Alternative Dispute Resolution Online Competition to be held in April 2007. Registration is open to law students in the European Union.

According to INTA’s web site:

This online competition is designed to increase the student’s use and understanding of ADR. Law students representing schools throughout the EU will exercise their negotiation, mediation and advocacy skills to resolve hypothetical trademark law disputes. Prizes will be awarded to the most effective advocate teams and the most effective mediator, based on evaluations by distinguished professionals from INTA’s ADR Committee.

The deadline for registering is October 1, 2006, and the competition gets underway in April 2007. Details may be found on INTA’s web site.

(Via the IPKat blog, reporting on intellectual property law developments.)

Blawg Review #65 salutes international lawyers and the World Cup

World Cup a model of international cooperationThe World Cup, which, alas, comes only once every four years, is a glorious example of international cooperation. During that time football-loving countries around the world put aside their differences and focus their energy and attention on what is described everywhere (except for the U.S., which in large part remains bafflingly hostile to soccer) as “the beautiful game“.

The World Cup, simultaneously a celebration of national pride and a model for international diplomacy, shows us what is possible when we come together in a common cause.

Dan Hull, host of this week’s edition of Blawg Review, the weekly review of the best in legal blogging, celebrates international relations and the law in what the anonymous editor of Blawg Review has called “The World Cup Blawg Review“.

No passport is necessary for this world tour of the legal blogosphere (which incidentally includes a stop in New Zealand to my friend Geoff Sharp and his blog, Mediator Blah…Blah…).

World Cup soccer fans and mediators alike will also appreciate the link to Why the FIFA World Cup Is and Should Be a Big Deal, an article published at the Harvard International Review, which celebrates the World Cup as a “great social, economic and political leveler”.

Getting to yes with blogging: time for ADR practitioners to join the conversation

Time for mediators to join in on the blog conversationThis post is the first in a series of essays on blogging for alternative dispute resolution professionals that will unfold over the course of the summer.

Blogging, after all, is an ideal medium for sharing ideas, transmitting knowledge, engaging in dialogue, and connecting with others in our field. My hope is that blogging will fire the imagination of conflict resolvers to the degree it has for other professions and endeavors.


One of the benefits of membership in the Association for Conflict Resolution is the subscription to its quarterly magazine, ACResolution. I had eagerly awaited the Spring 2006 issue since its theme was “Marketing Your ADR Practice: How to Make Conflict Resolution Your Day Job.” I figured that somewhere in there there’d definitely be something on blogging, maybe even an entire article devoted to blogs.As it turned out, I was wrong. There wasn’t a single mention of the word “blog” anywhere in the entire issue.

Not even, to my utter amazement, in an article on “Marketing Your Mediation Practice on the Internet”. How could a national publication with a sizeable circulation fail to include blogs in a whole issue devoted to marketing? And how could blogs have been omitted entirely from an article specifically on marketing on the internet?

This seemed symptomatic to me of blogging’s overall invisibility to the ADR community–something I am determined to change.

The influence of blogging cannot be denied: blogs have shaped our political processes, transformed the way we conduct and market our businesses, revolutionized the dissemination of knowledge and information, and redefined journalism.

For ADR practitioners and scholars to understand the significance of blogs, it may be helpful to consider its impact on an allied field: the law.

Students, scholars, and practitioners of law have seized upon blogging as a medium for debating, transmitting, and developing ideas and theories about law and its practice. Law blogs (known as “blawgs”) have radically changed dialogue and scholarship on legal issues, leading Dahlia Lithwick, senior editor of Slate, to recently observe:

The most compelling, cutting-edge, honest legal writing being produced in this country today is happening on the Internet, and the crop improves daily. From the fistful of judges (including Richard Posner) who maintain regular blogs, to the vast and growing number of law professors and law students who find the time to post daily, it’s clear that the real bones and guts and sinew of the national conversation is happening online, and not in print.

Law blogs have become such an integral and influential part of the legal landscape that no less a bastion of legal scholarship than Harvard Law School recently held a symposium on “Bloggership: How Blogs are Transforming Legal Scholarship” at its Berkman Center for Internet & Society. (Papers presented at this symposium may be downloaded at the Social Science Research Network.)

Although law blogs emerged only as recently as 2002, today there are over 1,500, according to “Blog 2.0: The Next Stage of Lawyer Blogging“, a recent article published on the American Bar Association web site by influential law blogger Tom Mighell. Law blogs, which launched a revolution in communication for the legal community, have gained such momentum that they are now rapidly moving toward a “next stage” as the title of Mighell’s article reflects.

It seems surprising then that the popularity and success of law blogging have not been duplicated among ADR practitioners and scholars, given how many parallels lie between our field and the law.

Alternative dispute resolution, like the law, has produced dazzling scholarship, influential texts, and numerous symposia, conferences, and initiatives. Despite its relatively short history as a modern movement, it enjoys a rich tradition of intellectual endeavor and advancement, produced through collaboration and communication among its adherents. It is a field by virtue of its very nature that promotes and pursues the exchange of philosophies, beliefs, and ideas. It is all about conversation.

So, too, is blogging which provides an ideal medium for mutual discovery, exchange of knowledge, and fostering connection. And all you need is a computer, an Internet connection, and an idea to share.

Despite the slow initial growth of ADR blogs, both momentum and awareness are building.

The National Institute for Advanced Conflict Resolution (NIACR) recently made history in announcing the winners of its first Annual Mediation Blog Roundup. This award, the very first of its kind, goes far to legitimize and gain recognition for blogging in the conflict resolution field. My deepest appreciation to NIACR for raising the public profile of conflict resolution bloggers.

In addition, the editors at ACResolution contacted me in the spring to ask me to write a 500-word article on blogging which will appear in the Summer 2006 issue. That’s exciting, too, since this is the first time (to the best of my knowledge) that ACResolution has ever published a piece on blogging. The issue comes out this month (although unfortunately it won’t be available online).

Meanwhile, the number of ADR bloggers is growing. Since I launched the World Directory of ADR Blogs just a few weeks ago, I’ve already added more than a dozen new titles, and others will be coming soon.

Interested? There are ways that you can contribute to the conversation:

If you need help or have questions about blogging, count on me as your resource. Get in touch with me or the other ADR bloggers who are out there. And please check back here at Online Guide to Mediation for more articles in this series on blogging as I share with you the benefits that publishing a blog can bring.

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New study shows that mice have capacity for empathy

New study shows mice capable of empathyA newly published study by researchers at the McGill University Pain Genetics Lab show that mice are capable of empathy. This study provides evidence that the capacity for empathy is not limited to humans and higher mammals and that empathy in fact may be hardwired into all mammals as a mechanism to ensure that species survive.

Emotional contagion“, the name given by scientists to describe the mouse’s automatic empathetic response to witnessing a fellow mouse in pain, also explains why yawning is contagious.

Settle It Now, a new negotiation blog, launches

New negotiation blog is launchedVictoria Pynchon, an attorney-mediator whose impressive credentials include 25 years of experience in commercial litigation coupled with an LL.M. in dispute resolution from the Straus Institute, Pepperdine Law School, has just launched a negotiation blog, Settle It Now Blog Spot.

Vickie describes her blog this way:

My blog is a negotiation blog, covering distributive and integrative negotiation techniques, interspersed with short articles about the social psychology of conflict, transformational mediation and mindfulness in commercial mediation and litigation…I find that most litigators and trial attorneys HATE to negotiate because they have never been educated or trained to do so. The blog is meant to convey the nuts and bolts essentials of mediation and to do so in a lively and entertaining manner. I hope attorneys will be able to skim my entries in the 5 minutes they have every other day to take a breath and relax.

Vickie also publishes Settle It Now, a web-based dispute resolution journal.