Dispute Resolution Society – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Thu, 10 Feb 2011 20:20:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Dispute Resolution Society – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Law Dispute Resolution Society World Champions https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/fordham-law-dispute-resolution-society-world-champions/ Thu, 10 Feb 2011 20:20:31 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=42162 Dear members and friends of the Fordham Dispute Resolution Society:

I am extremely honored to announce that the Fordham Dispute Resolution Society became World Champions this morning in Paris, surpassing 57 universities from around the globe to win the International Chamber of Commerce Mediation Competition.

Please join me in congratulating competitors Matt Bress, Christie Houlihan, Pat Jacobs, and Veni Manickam. Matt, in addition to competing, directed the efforts of the team as this year’s ICC Editor.

Each competitor’s display of talent and hard work over the past several months and through the grueling 8 rounds of competition was truly phenomenal and sets an incredible standard for the Society going forward this year and in years to come. Thank you to each competitor for the success and the honor you have brought to our Society and the Law School.

Congratulations and many thanks are also due to Steve Grable (’07), who has built an impressive record coaching our ICC Team each year since graduating, dedicating numerous weekends and countless evenings preparing the competitors and working alongside them as they move into the finals in Paris. Special thanks also to alumni Dan Hope ’08, Henry Ko ’08, Kenny Shaw ’09, Cindy Alvarado ’10, Justin Elliot ’10, and Mike Kanatake ’10, and DRS Managing Editor Tres Bulger for their huge support in preparing the teams. It goes without saying that the Society is indebted to our alumni and senior members for their continued dedication to our competitors.

Additionally, and as always, we are forever grateful for the matchless professional and academic guidance of Professor Jacqueline Nolan-Haley, who has been instrumental in establishing Fordham as a permanent presence at the invitation-only global competition.

Thanks and congratulations again,

Iverson

(you can read more about Fordham’s Dispute Resolution Society here)

Iverson Long, Chairman

Dispute Resolution Society

Fordham University School of Law

Fordham Law’s Dispute Resolution Program is ranked 8th in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The Dispute Resolution Society competes in national and international negotiation, mediation, and arbitration competitions, hosts a leading annual symposium and international commercial arbitration practice tournament, and teaches a course on negotiation techniques to local high school students at MLK Jr. High School. For more information, please visit the Dispute Resolution Society website.

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Let’s Make a Deal: Dispute Resolution Stresses Negotiation, Mediation and Arbitration https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/lets-make-a-deal-dispute-resolution-stresses-negotiation-mediation-and-arbitration/ Mon, 04 Oct 2010 17:51:25 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=9984
DRS chairman Michael Camarinos, with Jacqueline Nolan-Haley, professor of law and director of the ADR and Fordham’s ICC team of Cindy Alvarado and Justin Elliott.
Photo courtesy of Michael Camarinos

Michael Camarinos, FCRH ’07, LAW ’10, happened to be blogging at abovethelaw.com this past April when someone released an advance list of the U.S. News and World Report law school rankings.

As chairman of Fordham Law’s Dispute Resolution Society (DRS), Camarinos was thrilled to discover that Fordham’s Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) program had risen to eighth in the nation, ahead of most Ivy League schools with similar programs.

“I was overjoyed,” Camarinos recalled. “I thought, ‘We are right in the game now, even ready to take on Harvard.’”

The game Camarinos referred to is the coveted stage of international competitions in arbitration, negotiation and mediation—competitions that all fall under the umbrella of ADR programs at Fordham and other universities. The eighth-place ranking was the highest ever by a Fordham law school specialty program. An enthusiastic Camarinos called its faculty director, Jacqueline Nolan-Haley, immediately with the news.

“In competitions, this was one of our best years ever,” said Nolan-Haley, professor of law and director of the ADR and conflict resolution program. “With the successes of our various teams, getting to that rank was wonderful for us.”

While the phrase “dispute resolution” sounds rather dry, the philosophy of the program is not. Through courses, competitions and even some real-world negotiating, students gain practical experience in how to become some of the most creative problem solvers in the legal marketplace.

Those that compete in the DRS hone their skills through vigorous practice in mock negotiations, mediations and arbitrations with student, faculty and alumni coaches. They are then matched with a teammate and are entered into domestic and international competitions, traveling to locales such as Hong Kong, Vienna and Paris.

“Mediation is a very hard process, actually,” Nolan-Haley said. “It is based on problem solving instead of an adversarial model of ‘fight as much as you can, get as much as you can.’ And it requires creative thinking.”

In fact, Fordham’s DRS is so popular at the law school that last year nearly 45 percent of second-year law students and a quarter of first-years—nearly 150 students—tried out for 28 positions on the team.

Those 10 or 15 percent who are chosen look forward to long hours of training outside of classes, sometimes as much as 50 hours a week when preparing for a competition. What they get is a chance to compete in one or more of five competitions each academic year.

This year, Fordham’s team at ICC International Commercial Mediation—Justin Elliott, LAW ’10, and Cindy Alvarado, LAW ’10—placed fourth in the world and first in the nation in the competition that attracted more than 40 teams from 18 countries.

They participated in seven mock cases dealing with international commercial disputes—ranging from a liability battle between a wine merchant and wine distributor over bad wine, to an intellectual property fight over who had the rights to sell a patented perfume.

The team’s head coach was Stephen Grable, LAW ’07. A commercial litigation attorney at Hahn & Hessen L.L.C., Grable volunteers some 60 to 70 hours of prep time each year in the month leading up to the competition. A former DRS team member and chairman himself, Grable routinely invites students to practice in his Manhattan office and travels to Paris as part of the coaching team.

“My involvement with the society is easily my greatest source of pride as an alumnus,” Grable said.

The strenuousness of that ICC competition, said Camarinos, made it the hardest in which he has ever been involved. The teams had only a few hours between competitions, so they had to adapt quickly, often turning arguments, or points of view, on a dime. What ultimately puts a team ahead, Camarinos said, is “good instinct.”

“Part of it is knowing how to proceed with your options and interests, and ultimately evaluating your best alternative, i.e., when to make a deal,” he said. “That instinct is something the judges know when they see it.”

Nolan-Haley is the force behind the establishment of the DRS and Fordham’s ADR program. While practicing law several years ago in international trade litigation, she suspected that there was a “better way” to do her practice. In the late 1980s, she began teaching a mediation course at Fordham.

Nolan-Haley’s course proved so popular that she set up a mediation clinic at small claims courts in Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx. The clinic still operates today and provides students the opportunity to mediate such issues as landlord-tenant, employer-employee and defective goods and services cases.

Eventually, the mediation focus was expanded to include all forms of alternative dispute resolution.

“Over the last 10 years we have really tried to grow a program,” Nolan-Haley said. “The successes we’ve had have been a massive effort—by faculty, by students and by our alumni.”

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