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2007 J. Disp. Resol. 101 (2007)
Following the Script: An Empirical Analysis of Court-Ordered Mediation of Medical Malpractice Cases

handle is hein.journals/jdisres2007 and id is 105 raw text is: Following the Script: An Empirical
Analysis of Court-Ordered Mediation
of Medical Malpractice Cases
Ralph Peeples, Catherine Hirris** and Thomas Metzloff'**
I.  INTRODUCTION   ................................................................................................ 10 1
II. THE  RELEVANT  LITERATURE .......................................................................... 102
III.  M ETH O D S  ..................................................................................................... 103
IV .  F IN D IN G S  ....................................................................................................... 104
A .  The  C ases ................................................................................................ 104
B.  M ediator  Characteristics ........................................................................ 107
C .  The  Joint  Session  .................................................................................... 109
D .  The  Private  Sessions ............................................................................... 111
V .  M EDIATOR  A CTIONS ....................................................................................... 112
V I.  BEHAVIOR  B Y  COUNSEL  ............................................................................... 114
V II.  T HE  PROCESS  ............................................................................................... 114
VIII. EVENTUAL   CASE  OUTCOME    ....................................................................... 116
IX. DISCUSSION   AND  CONCLUSION    ..................................................................... 117
I. INTRODUCTION
Court-ordered mediation of civil cases has become an accepted part of the
litigation process in a number of states and in some federal courts.' The wide-
spread growth of court-ordered mediation is not difficult to explain. First of all,
the process appears to produce settlements, although because most cases settle
anyway, it is difficult to say that court-ordered mediation reduces trial rates.2 It
does, however, at least provide a structured opportunity for settlement discussions,
if the parties are so inclined. Second, court-ordered mediation is a process usually
* Catherine Harris is a professor of sociology at Wake Forest University.
** Thomas Metzloff is a professor of law at Duke University Law School.
*** Ralph Peeples is a professor of law at Wake Forest University School of Law. This research was
supported with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, New Jersey, Grant I.D.
#027071.
1. CARRIE MENKEL-MEADOW, LELA P. LOVE, & ANDREA SCHNEIDER, DISPUTE RESOLUTION:
BEYOND THE ADVERSARIAL MODEL 274 (2005); COURT-ANNEXED MEDIATION: CRITICAL
PERSPECTIVES ON SELECTED STATE AND FEDERAL PROGRAMS v (Edward Bergman & John Bicker-
man eds., 1998).
2. This conclusion was drawn from the 1995 study of the North Carolina mediated settlement
conference program by the Institute of Government. See STEVENS H. CLARKE, ELIZABETH D. ALLEN &
KELLY MCCORMICK, COURT-ORDERED CIVIL CASE MEDIATION IN NORTH CAROLINA: AN
EVALUATION OF ITS EFFECTS 55-56 (1995). See generally Marc Galanter, The Vanishing Trial: An
Examination of Trials and Related Matters in Federal and State Courts, I J. EMP. LEGAL STUD. 459
(2004) (an examination of the fact that many more cases settle than go to trial); Marc Galanter & Mia
Cahill, Most Cases Settle: Judicial Promotion and Regulation of Settlements, 46 STAN. L. REV. 1339
(1994) (same).

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