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Informationen zum Autor Ellen Waldman is a professor of law who teaches, lectures, and trains in the area of mediation and health care ethics. She is the founder and director of the Mediation Clinic at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego and has published extensively on mediation, bioethics, and other related topics. She has mediated a wide variety of disputes and serves on private and public health care ethics committees. Klappentext Mediation Ethics is a groundbreaking text that offers conflict resolution professionals a much-needed resource for traversing the often disorienting landscape of ethical decision making. Edited by mediation expert Ellen Waldman, the book is filled with illustrative case studies and authoritative commentaries by mediation specialists that offer insight for handling ethical challenges with clarity and deliberateness. Waldman begins with an introductory discussion on mediation's underlying values, its regulatory codes, and emerging models of practice. Subsequent chapters treat ethical dilemmas known to vex even the most experienced practitioner: power imbalance, conflicts of interest, confidentiality, attorney misconduct, cross-cultural conflict, and more. In each chapter, Waldman analyzes the competing values at stake and introduces a challenging case, which is followed by commentaries by leading mediation scholars who discuss how they would handle the case and why. Waldman concludes each chapter with a synthesis that interprets the commentators' points of agreement and explains how different operating premises lead to different visions of what an ethical mediator should do in a given case setting. Evaluative, facilitative, narrative, and transformative mediators are all represented. Together, the commentaries showcase the vast diversity that characterizes the field today and reveal the link between mediator philosophy, method, and process of ethical deliberation. Commentaries by Harold Abramson Phyllis Bernard John Bickerman Melissa Brodrick Dorothy J. Della Noce Dan Dozier Bill Eddy Susan Nauss Exon Gregory Firestone Dwight Golann Art Hinshaw Jeremy Lack Carol B. Liebman Lela P. Love Julie Macfarlane Carrie Menkel-Meadow Bruce E. Meyerson Michael Moffitt Forrest S. Mosten Jacqueline Nolan-Haley Bruce Pardy Charles Pou Mary Radford R. Wayne Thorpe John Winslade Roger Wolf Susan M. Yates Zusammenfassung This is the ground-breaking handbook of ethics written for conflict resolution professionals. It provides an indispensable daily tool for all practitioners in the field and offers a must-have resource for practitioners, professors, students, attorneys, and everyone in the field of meditation and alternate dispute resolution. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface ix Acknowledgments xiii 1 Values, Models, and Codes 1 2 Autonomy and Diminished Capacity 27 Commentators: Carol B. Liebman and Mary Radford 3 Autonomy and the Emotions 55 Commentators: Dorothy Della Noce and John Winslade 4 Disputant Autonomy and Power Imbalance 87 Commentators: Forrest S. Mosten and Bill Eddy 5 Tensions Between Disputant Autonomy and Substantive Fairness: The Misinformed Disputant 113 Commentators: Lela P. Love and Jacqueline Nolan-Haley 6 Information, Autonomy, and the Unrepresented Party 155 Commentators: Michael Moffitt and Dan Dozier 7 Mediating on the Wrong Side of the Law 177 Commentators: John Bickerman, Jeremy Lack, and Julie Macfarlane 8 Mediating with Lies in the Room 199 Commentators: Dwight Golann and Melissa Brodrick 9 Confidentiality 2...