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Alternative Dispute Resolution Research

Information about researching common ADR methodologies, including arbitration, negotiation, mediation, and more.

Getting Started

What is "Alternative Dispute Resolution"?

Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) refers to a range of methods, such as arbitration, mediation, and negotiation, used to resolve disputes without litigation.


This Harvard Law School research guide offers resources and strategies for researching ADR methodologies and practices, both within the HLS library and beyond.

Good Starting Points for ADR Research in the U.S.

Secondary Sources

Encyclopedias & American Law Reports

Legal encyclopedias contain brief, broad summaries of legal topics. They provide introductions to legal topics and explain relevant terms of art. State encyclopedias can also be found on Westlaw and Lexis.

The American Law Reports contains in-depth articles on narrow topics of the law.  Use the following Indices to access the ALR.  Note: Lexis also has some ALR materials but Westlaw's are more complete.

General Resources

Arbitration

Books

Databases

Mediation & Conciliation

Books 

Databases

Negotiation

Books

Databases

Using Secondary Sources

As you can see, secondary sources are an excellent starting point for your research. To learn more about what they are and how to use them effectively, please visit the following guide: 

U.S. Decisions

Law

ADR Decisions by Area of Law

Consumer Law

Labor Law

Securities Law 

International Decisions

Conciliation

Arbitration

Mediation

Additional Resources

ADR at Harvard Law School

Organizations

Additional Resources

Getting Help

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Credit and CC License

Credit

Thank you to Jennifer Allison for her work on the initial version of this guide.

CC License

Creative Commons License

This guide is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

You may reproduce any part of it for noncommercial purposes as long as credit is included and it is shared in the same manner.