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34 Wash. U. J. L. & Pol'y 71 (2010)
Implicit Bias and the Illusion of Mediator Neutrality

handle is hein.journals/wajlp34 and id is 73 raw text is: Implicit Bias and the Illusion of Mediator Neutrality
Carol Izumi*
INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff (P), the owner/operator of a carpet cleaning business,
sued the defendant-homeowners for $500 in a breach of contract
action for the unpaid balance of a $1, 000 carpet cleaning agreement.
Defendants (Ds or Mr. and Mrs. D) counterclaimed for the return of
the $500 deposit they paid before work began. Ds hired P to dry out
and clean the soaked carpet in their basement, which had flooded
during a storm. Ds refused to pay the balance because the carpet had
not dried out as P promised. Under the small claims court mediation
program, the parties were required to attempt mediation before a
trial date was set.
P was a middle-aged white male who attended the mediation in
work clothes. Ds were an equally mature married couple of Asian
descent who spoke with noticeable accents. They were dressed in
what might be called business casual attire. The mediation was
conducted around a large conference table by two white co-
mediators: a male who looked to be in his forties and a younger
female. The mediators conducted a caucus model facilitative-style
mediation. P presented the case as a simple breach of contract: the
agreement between the parties required the homeowners to make two
* Clinical Professor of Law, University of California, Hastings College of Law and
Professor Emeritus of Clinical Law, George Washington University Law School; former
Director of the GWU Law School Consumer Mediation Clinic and Community Dispute
Resolution Center Project. The author thanks Washington University School of Law and the
wonderful organizers and participants at the New Directions in ADR and Clinical Legal
Education Roundtable. This Article was produced during my tenure at GW so special thanks
go to my former GW colleagues, Dean Fred Lawrence and Associate Dean Paul Butler for their
support, and Phyllis Goldfarb, Susan Jones, Joan Meier, and Paula Williams for their invaluable
comments and encouragement. Extra special thanks to UC Hastings Chancellor and Dean Frank
Wu for his support and good counsel.

71

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