Category Archives: Events for Mediators

CENTER FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION ANNOUNCES "CYBERWEEK 2005", AN ANNUAL ONLINE WEB-BASED CONFERENCE

Cyberweek 2005From April 4 through 8, 2005, the Center for Information Technology and Dispute Resolution (CITDR) will be holding Cyberweek 2005, its seventh annual online conference.

According to the announcement released by Ethan Katsh, Director of CITDR, the events and programs planned for Cyberweek include:

  • Release of the new ODR library and database
  • Discussions with leading practitioners and theorists about the present and future of ODR
  • Report on the UN Forum on ODR 2004
  • The 2005 International Competition on Online Dispute Resolution (presently ongoing)
  • Seminar on the challenges in planning and implementing ODR efforts – examples from Sri Lanka, the Phillipines and Great Britain
  • Panel discussion on teaching ODR
  • Seminar on public sector ODR – the University of Massachusetts/National Mediation Board/National Science Foundation project
  • Demonstration of teaching and collaborating in groups with Moodle
  • Simulated dispute resolution processes
  • Demonstrations involving ConflictLab.com, SmartSettle.com, Info-Share.org and others

Registration is free, and online dispute resolution practitioners, as well as anyone interested in learning more about the online dispute resolution field, are welcome to attend.

MIND OVER MATTER: The Initiative on Mindfulness at University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law

meditationIn an earlier posting I had lamented the confusion in the public mind between “mediation” and “meditation”. There is, however, a potentially valuable connection between these two distinctly different practices insofar as a technique used in one can increase a practitioner’s effectiveness in the other.

With this understanding in mind, the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law launched a program called the Initiative on Mindfulness in Law and Dispute Resolution, under the direction of renowned mediator and law school professor Leonard L. Riskin. According to the law school’s web site, the Initiative “is devoted to exploring the potential benefits and risks of mindfulness (and to some extent related contemplative practices, including yoga and other forms of meditation) to members of the legal and dispute resolution professions and those who use or are affected by those professions.”

Some objections, however, have been raised to the teaching of mindfulness at a public university, including concerns that doing so may constitute a constitutionally impermissible endorsement of religious beliefs.

In the best spirit of dispute resolution, however, a public debate concerning mindfulness will be held this Thursday at the law school, with the aim of promoting dialogue and providing an opportunity for all perspectives on this issue to be heard.