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Join us for Chai Time! A free, open to the public, opportunity to learn about…

Multilateral Negotiation: Tools for Conflict Resolution and Prevention Tuesday, March 13th, 2 PM – 3:30 PM iLab/Building 37 Description: Multilateralism is a process of international negotiation involving primarily, although not exclusively, state actors and at least three parties. In the international context, effective multilateral negotiations help resolve and prevent conflicts. This session explores the characteristics and processes of multilateral negotiations, and considers how the model could be applied to address social, political and economic issues in the Hawaii community. Speakers: Professor Alex Carter is the director of the Columbia Law School Mediation Program, director of Clinical Programs, and a Clinical Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. Carter won the Jane Marks Murphy Prize for clinical advocacy while a student at Columbia Law School and has become a strong advocate of mediation as a valuable tool for many kinds of legal challenges. Through the New York Peace Institute, a nonprofit that specializes in mediation, Carter has served as a mediator. She has also supervised student mediations in court-related programs at New York City Civil Court and Harlem Small Claims Court. Carter received her J.D. from the Law School in 2003, where she was articles editor for the Journal of Transnational Law and won the Lawrence S. Greenbaum Prize for best oral argument in the 2002 Harlan Fiske Stone Moot Court Competition. She earned her B.A. at Georgetown University in 1997. Professor Shawn Watts is the associate director of Columbia Law School Mediation Program. A Citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, Watts won the Jane Marks Murphy Prize for clinical advocacy and was a Strine Fellow while he was a student at Columbia Law School. He developed and teaches a course in Native American Peacemaking, which is a traditional indigenous form of dispute resolution. He has mediated in the New…

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Join us at Let’s Talk Story! Hear and share stories and best practices regarding…

Strategies to Bridge Cultural and Generational Gaps in Conflict Resolution March 12, 2018 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm Aliiolani Hale, Hawaiʻi State Supreme Court Room 101, 417 S. King Street Honolulu, HI 96813 Co-sponsored by the Association for Conflict Resolution, Hawaiʻi; Spark M. Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution; The Center for Alternative Dispute Resolution, Hawaiʻi State Judiciary; The Hawaiʻi State Bar Association – ADR Section; The Mediation Center of the Pacific This is a free training event for members and volunteers of co-sponsoring organizations. The State of Hawaiʻi is a truly unique melting pot of ethnicities and cultures, spanning multiple generations. From intra-familial conflicts to commercial disputes, the issues that Hawaii residents encounter on a daily basis often stem from cross-cultural and cross-generational misunderstandings. Join us to share stories and generate best practices relating to cross-cultural and cross-generational conflict resolution. Click here to RSVP Seating is limited to the first 25 Registrants Download the flyer

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1-hour Free Webinar from the Virtual Mediation Lab

ONLINE DISPUTE RESOLUTION: RESOURCES SAVED, JUSTICE SERVED January 18, 2018 9:00 AM Hawaii Time This webinar will provide an introduction to court-connected online dispute resolution through a firsthand perspective from the Franklin County Municipal Court and its online dispute resolution (ODR) platform provider, Matterhorn by Court Innovations In 2017, the Ohio State Bar Association recognized the Franklin County Municipal Court for Judicial Innovation for its online dispute resolution program. WHY ATTEND? This webinar will interest people involved with court-connected dispute resolution, including judges, court administrators, mediators, and attorneys. At the end of the webinar, participants will be able to: Define court-connected online dispute resolution, including the who, what, where, when, why and how of ODR Determine whether court-connected online dispute resolution is appropriate for their court Identify steps to implement a court-connected online dispute resolution program Forecast the project scale, procurement steps and benefits of ODR Presenters: Alex Sanchez, Esq. and MJ Cartwright. PRESENTER BIOS Alex Sanchez, Esq. is Manager of Small Claims and Dispute Resolution at the Franklin County Municipal Court. Alex mediates all civil case types for the court. Prior to joining the municipal court, Alex worked with the State of Ohio, The Ohio State University, and nonprofit organizations across the country. In his spare time, Alex serves as an officer for a large private foundation that awards more than a quarter-million dollars annually through an international student STEM competition. Alex is a graduate of the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and received his undergraduate degree from Loyola Marymount University. MJ Cartwright leads all aspects of the online dispute resolution company Court Innovations. Matterhorn by Court Innovations provides meaningful, usable, and fair solutions that expand online and mobile access to our courts for all citizens: “go to court” without going to court. MJ builds teams and businesses…

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The Art of Mediation: Mediation Strategies by Lou Chang January 31, 2018 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM  HST Hawaii State Bar Association Conference Room 1100 Alakea Street, Suite 1000 Honolulu, HI 96813 Mediators assume certain demeanors in their role as mediators. Mediators can offer themselves as facilitators, benefactors, directive, evaluative or assume a special persona. Mediators usually have a general or default strategy as they go into a mediation. However, often, after listening and connecting with the parties, mediators will make strategic shifts from their default or planned strategy and can choose from a wide array of mediation strategies to maintain momentum in the process. This 90-minute workshop will review the range of strategic options that a mediator may decide to utilize. Within the available time of the workshop, the presenter and participants will explore as many of the options as possible together. About the Presenter: Lou Chang, Esq. serves as an independent and neutral mediator and arbitrator for commercial, design & construction, labor-management, employment, business, franchise, real estate, insurance, probate, family business, personal injury and civil disputes. Lou is also a teacher / trainer in the following capacities: Adjunct Faculty/Lecturer at University of Hawaii, Manoa (Negotiation, Mediation Skills and Advanced Facilitation and Mediation (2003-16)); Wm. S. Richardson School of Law, Mediation and Advocacy. 2005; School of Architecture, Conflict Management for DesignProfessionals. Adjunct Faculty, Chaminade University, Executive MBA Program, Negotiation (2015-16) Faculty trainer of Arbitrators and/or Mediators: Am. Arbitration Assoc., Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, Hawaii State and Federal Courts, Australian Commercial Disputes Centre, Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre, Subordinate Court-Singapore, Kuala Lumpur Regional Centre for Arbitration, Supreme Court of the Republic of Palau and others. CLICK HERE TO REGISTER Non-member: $30.00 + $3.72 Fee Member: $20.00 + $3.16 Fee Student: $10.00 + $2.61 Fee      

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Coming on January 31, 2018 – Save the Date!

“The Art of Mediation: Mediation Strategies” by Lou Chang, Mediator, Arbitrator, National Academy of Arbitrators January 31, 2018 Noon-1:30 PM HSBA Conference Room Mediators assume certain demeanors in their role as mediators. Mediators can offer themselves as facilitators, benefactors, directive, evaluative or assume a special persona. Mediators usually have a general or default strategy as they go into a mediation. But, often, after listening and connecting with the parties, mediators will make strategic shifts from their default or planned strategy and can choose from a wide array of mediation strategies to maintain momentum in the process. The workshop will review the range of strategic options that a mediator may decide to utilize. Within the available time of the workshop, we will explore as many of the options as possible. Be there for this valuable workshop! Costs: $20 ACR Hawaii members; $30 non-members; $10 students See Lou Chang’s Bio Registration details to follow  

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Join us at these December events!

December 1-2, 2017  Public Participation in a Polarized Era: The Good, The Bad, The Future   A timely workshop conference presented by: The ACCORD3.0 Network, The University of Hawaiʻi’s Public Policy Center, The William S. Richardson Law School at the University of Hawaiʻi, Ulupono Initiative, ThinkTech Hawaiʻi, and Honolulu Civil Beat see the website for more information and registration details   December 8, 2017  Annual Meeting, Association for Conflict Resolution, Hawai‘i Chapter Honey’s Restaurant at Koolau Golf Club – Keynote presentation by Lou Chang, Esq. – The Healing Power of Apology – 6pm-8:30pm Register Now!   Volunteer Recognition & Holiday Gathering Mediation Center of the Pacific – celebrate with our fellow mediators – open to all mediators & supporters – HawaiiUSA Federal Credit Union, 1226 College Walk – 11:30am-1:30pm see the flyer and the Mediation Center of the Pacific’s 2017 Honorees      

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Don’t miss this valuable workshop! Sign up now!

Public Participation in a Polarized Era: The Good, The Bad, The Future A timely workshop conference presented by: The ACCORD3.0 Network The University of Hawaiʻi’s Public Policy Center The William S. Richardson Law School at the University of Hawaiʻi Ulupono Initiative ThinkTech Hawaiʻi Honolulu Civil Beat Part 1 – Taking Stock and Devising Solutions Friday, December 1, 2017 8:00am – 4:30pm Imin Hall, East-West Center, University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa Part 2 – Public Consultation Strategies and Skills Saturday, December 2, 2017 8:00am – 12:00pm Classroom 2, William S. Richardson School of Law Too many public meetings have become perfunctory ‘tick-the-box’ compliance exercises, or simply fresh combat zones for old ideological wars. Many have evolved into formulaic productions by project proponents or well-organized opposition campaigns by opponents. Both represent an unfunded bureaucratic burden for agencies to endure. Further, as public discourse has become increasingly polarized and hostile, it gets harder to arrive at decisions that can be supported by a plurality of citizens. This full-day gathering, followed by a half-day skill and strategy workshop, will take stock of how public participation is faring, gather ideas for changes to the way public consultation takes place, offer techniques and approaches to improve public participation, and spark conversations that have consequences now and for the future. See the website for more information and registration details Download the Flyer Download the Community Voices description

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Save the date! ACR-Hawaiʻi Annual Meeting: Friday, December 8, 2017, 6pm-9pm

From the ACR Hawaiʻi Board: Mark your calendars! Annual Meeting Friday, December 8, 2017 6pm-8:30pm Honey’s at Koolau Restaurant at the Koolau Golf Club 45-550 Kionaole Road, Kaneohe, HI 96744  “Apology” workshop by Lou Chang!  Experientially learn the value of effective apologies, greet fellow members, and enjoy great food, all at a reduced price for members!   Details to follow Hope to see you there!

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From the Virtual Mediation Lab: Mediators’ initial skepticism of online mediation turns into enthusiasm

     Conflict Intervention Service (CIS) is a grant funded project of the City and County of San Francisco in partnership with The Bar Association of San Francisco’s Bay Area Mediation Services Program.  This innovative program utilizes skilled mediators with diverse backgrounds in landlord-tenant law, psychology, addiction, mental health and housing conflict to resolve disputes in affordable housing that can lead to eviction or homelessness.      On November 2, 2017 a group of those mediators participated in a Virtual Mediation Lab Hands-on Training in Online Mediation, which consisted of 2 parts:      >> Part 1 – 60-min Introduction to Online Mediation (What online mediation means and how It works; how we  (mediators) can do online everything we are used to do face-to-face; how to blend face-to-face and online mediation; which cases are suitable for online mediation; online mediation benefits; which video collaboration software works best for online mediation.      >> Part 2 – 90-min Hands-on Online Mediation via Zoom (Each mediator practiced what they learned during Part 1)      At the end of the training, Giuseppe Leone, founder of Virtual Mediation Lab,  asked all mediators a simple question: “Has this 150-min hands-on training changed your view of online mediation?” Here are some of their answers: “Now I am not afraid of it” “I am eager to do it” “I am marveling at the capabilities of this software (Zoom). It’s incredible.” “I’m excited at the way people perceive technology and their relationship with technology. Online mediation may add an edge to mediation”. “This is extraordinary” “It opens up a whole new world!”      This experience seems to show that a good way to respond to many experienced mediators’ initial (and natural) skepticism about online mediation is to let them try it and judge by themselves.    …

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Public Participation in a Polarized Era: The Good, The Bad, The Future

A timely workshop conference presented by: The ACCORD3.0 Network The University of Hawaiʻi’s Public Policy Center The William S. Richardson Law School at the University of Hawaiʻi Ulupono Initiative ThinkTech Hawaiʻi Honolulu Civil Beat Part 1 – Taking Stock and Devising Solutions Friday, December 1, 2017 8:00am – 4:30pm Imin Hall, East-West Center, University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa Part 2 – Public Consultation Strategies and Skills Saturday, December 2, 2017 8:00am – 12:00pm Classroom 2, William S. Richardson School of Law Too many public meetings have become perfunctory ‘tick-the-box’ compliance exercises, or simply fresh combat zones for old ideological wars. Many have evolved into formulaic productions by project proponents or well-organized opposition campaigns by opponents. Both represent an unfunded bureaucratic burden for agencies to endure. Further, as public discourse has become increasingly polarized and hostile, it gets harder to arrive at decisions that can be supported by a plurality of citizens. This full-day gathering, followed by a half-day skill and strategy workshop, will take stock of how public participation is faring, gather ideas for changes to the way public consultation takes place, offer techniques and approaches to improve public participation, and spark conversations that have consequences now and for the future. See the website for more information and registration details Download the Flyer Download the Community Voices description