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The Modern Dispute: Mediation and ADR

Posted: 25 Nov 2025
by
Ruby Keeler-Williams
Chartered Legal Executive
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In my experience, people often do not seek legal advice lightly. By the time most individuals or businesses decide to take legal advice, the dispute has already begun to place serious strain on their time, reputation, financial resources or emotions. Many are uncertain about the direction they should take.

The courts are aware of this pressure. The Civil Procedure Rules (CPR), particularly the Overriding Objective in CPR 1.1, require disputes to be handled in a manner that is fair, efficient and proportionate.

This principle has shaped the courts’ attitude towards settlement and has led to an increased emphasis on Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). ADR is the name for a range of processes designed to help parties resolve disputes without the need for formal court proceedings. Mediation, together with other forms of ADR have become part of all modern litigation strategy.

This article sets out information about the purpose of ADR and the different types available. It explains why mediation is frequently the most effective route to resolving a dispute and how mediation fits within the broader procedural obligations imposed by the Civil Procedure Rules.

The Limits of Litigation and the Shift Toward ADR

Litigation is often perceived as the natural route for resolving a dispute. In reality, it has become the exception. The vast majority of civil cases settle before trial because the litigation process is slow, highly structured, expensive and public.

The courts can only grant a narrow range of outcomes and cannot always tailor a solution to the personal or practical realities of the dispute. Furthermore, court proceedings cannot protect a business relationship, preserve confidentiality or acknowledge the emotional context behind a dispute.

The Civil Procedure Rules acknowledge this limitation. CPR 1.4 requires the courts to actively manage cases and CPR 1.4(2)(e) expressly directs judges to encourage the use of Alternative Dispute Resolution. This is not simply a suggestion, but a procedural obligation that reflects judicial recognition of the shortcomings of formal litigation.

Parties must consider ADR before issuing proceedings under the Pre-Action Protocols. They must also show that they have engaged constructively with settlement possibilities. Failure to do so may lead to costs orders against them.

Case law supports this position:

In Halsey v Milton Keynes General NHS Trust [2004] EWCA Civ 576, the Court of Appeal confirmed that an unreasonable refusal to mediate can justify costs sanctions.

In PGF II SA v OMFS Co 1 Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 1288, the Court of Appeal held that a failure to respond to an invitation to mediate is itself unreasonable.

In Dunnett v Railtrack plc [2002] EWCA Civ 303, the Court emphasised that parties who dismiss mediation without proper consideration may face adverse consequences.

These decisions make it clear that the court expects parties to approach mediation seriously. Refusal to participate must be justified by clear and reasonable grounds. Courts remain alert to the misuse of ADR as a tactic and are prepared to penalise parties who reject mediation without proper reason.

Types of Alternative Dispute Resolution

There are several forms of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) which may be used to resolve disputes without issuing court proceedings. Depending on the nature of the case and position, certain methods will be more appropriate than others.

Negotiation is an informal process in which the parties, through their legal representatives, seek to reach a mutually acceptable settlement through discussion and exchange of proposals. It is often the most cost-effective approach and can be tailored to particular priorities such as ensuring a swift resolution or agreeing confidential settlement terms. Negotiation would usually be the first step before considering other, more structured ADR processes. However, negotiation has limitations compared to Mediation, as it lacks the structure and independent facilitation that a mediator provides, which can make it more difficult to overcome entrenched positions.

Mediation is a voluntary and confidential process in which an independent mediator helps the parties explore settlement options. The mediator does not impose a decision, but facilitates constructive dialogue aimed at achieving a mutually acceptable outcome. Mediation is often  particularly useful as the entire process is completely confidential and it enables the parties to engage constructively without risking public scrutiny. A benefit is that you can agree to outcomes beyond what a court could order. This article will analyse Mediation further.

Arbitration is a formal process where the parties agree to refer their dispute to an independent arbitrator (or panel) who makes a binding decision, similar to a court judgment. However, arbitration can only take place if both parties agree or if there is an arbitration clause in the contract.

Early Neutral Evaluation involves an independent and experienced evaluator, often a senior barrister or retired judge, who gives a non-binding assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of each side’s case. This process can help both parties understand the likely outcome at trial and encourage settlement. It can be particularly useful where you may wish to test your position before committing to public litigation. However, it depends on both parties’ willingness to participate and it does not result directly in a settlement.

In most cases, negotiation and mediation are likely to be the most suitable and proportionate ADR methods. Both allow for a private, cost-effective resolution and can help to protect both parties’ reputations while still resolving the dispute.

The Strengths of Mediation

Mediation is neither a diluted form of litigation nor a simple informal discussion. Mediation is a structured process facilitated by a neutral professional whose purpose is to assist the parties in identifying practical solutions to their dispute.

There are many strengths of mediation:

Confidentiality

One of the most significant advantages of mediation is the process is confidential. Everything said during the mediation is confidential and without prejudice (other than in very specific circumstances, such as in the recent case of Pentagon Food Group Ltd and Others v B Cadman Ltd [2024] EWHC 2513 (Comm)).

Confidentiality allows parties to explore options and speak openly without fear that their comments may be used against them later. For individuals with public profiles, regulated professionals and commercial entities, this confidentiality is often essential.

Control Over the Outcome

In litigation, the judge imposes a result. In mediation, the parties create their own solution.

Furthermore, the range of possible outcomes is significantly wider in mediation. For example, parties can include confidentiality clauses, apology terms, non-financial concessions, public or private statements, revised commercial arrangements or future dispute management procedures. Courts do not have the power to order such outcomes.

Mediation allows parties to craft solutions that reflect the reality of the situation rather than being limited to a fixed, judicially imposed solution.

Cost Efficiency

Litigation costs increase rapidly as a case progresses, especially once proceedings have been issued.

Disclosure, witness statements, expert evidence and trial preparation all requires substantial work and thus legal costs.

A mediation is far more contained. It usually takes place within a single day and involves the preparation of a mediation bundle and position statement rather than months of litigation preparation. Mediation therefore reduces cost exposure.

Timing

A common misconception we hear is that mediation should only occur after key documents and evidence have been exchanged. This is not correct. Mediation can take place at any stage, including before proceedings have been issued.

Early mediation often prevents the unnecessary escalation of a dispute. Parties are more open to compromise before they incur substantial costs or adopt entrenched positions.

The Civil Procedure Rules support early and proportionate engagement and mediation achieves this.

The Human Context of Mediation

People and even businesses rarely engage with disputes in a detached or purely analytical state. Disputes are often emotionally charged, a financial burden and/or professionally embarrassing.

Some individuals fear the publicity associated with litigation. Businesses may worry about public confidence or internal morale. Professionals may fear regulatory implications.

Mediation addresses these concerns because it provides:

  1. A confidential and private environment to express concerns.
  2. A process that acknowledges the complexity of a dispute rather than reducing a dispute to legal arguments.
  3. An opportunity to regain control of decision making.
  4. A structure that avoids the long and unpredictable timelines of the court process.

From our perspective as lawyers, mediation provides a disciplined environment in which we can test legal arguments, manage client expectations, reassess litigation risk and refine our litigation strategy.

It exposes the strength of each side’s case in a controlled manner and often clarifies key issues that would otherwise remain obscured or uncertain until trial preparation.

What Does Mediation Require?

Mediation requires that the parties have clear objectives, a realistic assessment of litigation risk and a willingness to engage in problem solving.

It does not require an admission of weakness or an abandonment of legal principles. It simply requires a recognition that most disputes do not need to reach trial to be resolved.

Mediation is not passive and parties do not simply attend and wait for a proposal to appear. They must articulate their objectives clearly (usually via an initial position statement), evaluate the strength of their position with real scrutiny and potentially respond to new information that is revealed.

During the mediation itself, parties must make decisions in real time. Offers need to be crafted with care and litigation risk must be continuously recalculated.

A competent mediator will identify the underlying interests of each party, challenge unrealistic positions and facilitate structured discussion between the parties, test each parties assumptions, probe weaknesses and highlight any inconsistencies.

How is a Mediator Selected?

The choice of mediator is an important part of the process and clients often ask how a mediator is selected. In most mediations the parties agree the mediator jointly. This usually involves each side proposing one or more candidates and then agreeing on an individual who is acceptable to both. Where agreement cannot be reached, a recognised mediation body can nominate a mediator, although this is less common.

The criteria for selecting a mediator depend on the nature of the dispute and the personalities involved. Some mediators take a more facilitative approach and focus on guiding the discussion, while others take a more evaluative approach and challenge the legal or factual assumptions in greater depth. Factors that usually matter include the mediator’s experience in the relevant area of law, their reputation for managing complex personalities and their style of questioning. For disputes involving sensitive personal or reputational issues, it is often helpful to select a mediator with experience in high-conflict or high-profile matters.

Our firm has worked with a wide range of senior mediators, including leading practitioners, highly experienced barristers and retired judges who now practice exclusively as mediators. The head of our firm, Mr Richard Gray, is also an accredited mediator.

Our experience allows us to identify mediators whose skills and style are well-suited to the dynamics of each particular dispute. We guide clients through the selection process to ensure that the mediator chosen is capable of managing the issues effectively, giving the mediation the highest possible chance of success.

What does a typical Mediation look like?

Although each mediation is different, the structure tends to be consistent. This can take place either in person or via video conference.

The Exchange of Position Statements (Usually the Day Before)

Before the mediation begins, the parties usually exchange position statements. These are concise written documents that set out:

  • the background to the dispute
  • the key issues from that party’s perspective
  • the outcome the party seeks
  • the reasoning, evidence or commercial/economic considerations that support that outcome
  • any obstacles the party anticipates

Position statements are not witness evidence or legal submissions. They are a clear, strategic overview that assists the mediator in understanding the dispute and helps the parties clarify what they want to actually achieve. They ensure that the mediation begins with a shared understanding of the issues, rather than spending the early stages clarifying basic facts.

Joint Opening Session

On the morning of the mediation, all parties and their legal representatives meet together with the mediator for an opening session. This serves several purposes. The mediator introduces themselves, outlines the structure of the day, confirms the confidentiality of the process and establishes the ground rules. The mediator also reinforces that they are neutral and that the process belongs to the parties.

Each side may then be invited to give a short opening statement. The purpose is not to argue the case. The purpose is to set out what the dispute means to them, what they hope to resolve and what is most important going forward. It also gives the mediator an early sense of the personalities, priorities and any potential areas of tension.

Once the joint session concludes, the parties break into separate rooms.

Private Rooms

Each party occupies its own private room. The mediator will spend time with each side throughout the day.

Everything said in the private room is confidential. The mediator cannot share information without permission. This environment allows each party and their representatives to speak openly about their concerns, objectives for the mediation and their genuine bottom line.

The mediator will examine the party’s position in detail. They will question assumptions, identify weaknesses and probe as to the reasoning behind certain demands.

This is often one of the most challenging aspects for clients because the mediator’s role includes identifying vulnerabilities that must be understood if realistic progress is to be made.

Shuttle Negotiation

Once the mediator has a clear picture of each side’s starting point, they begin the process known as shuttle negotiation. The mediator moves between the rooms, spending time with each party.

The mediator will often begin by challenging the party’s understanding of the dispute. They may play devil’s advocate by raising the strongest points the other side could make, or highlighting risks that the party has not fully considered.

This is not to be adversarial, but rather it encourages realism from the parties. The mediator’s objective is to ensure that each party understands both the strength and the vulnerability of their case. Once the mediator has explored the issues with one side, they will take the revised proposal or counteroffer to the other side and repeat the same exercise there.

The mediator will test the logic of each offer, question whether it aligns with the party’s stated priorities and explore whether adjustments can be made to bring the parties closer. This process continues for as long as progress is possible.

Review and Adjustment

As the day progresses, each party reviews the information brought by the mediator and adjusts its position based on litigation risk, cost, time and other practical issues.

The proposals typically evolve through several rounds of refinement. Many parties begin the day with rigid expectations but end it with a clearer understanding of what genuinely matters to them and what is actually achievable.

For a successful mediation, the parties must be flexible and able to respond rationally to new information.

This is arguably one of the most valuable parts of mediation, as parties are able to reshape their positions freely, without the procedural limitations of litigation, amending claims and the associated cost consequences.

Drafting Settlement Terms

If the parties reach an agreement, the legal representatives draft the settlement terms immediately or shortly after the mediation. These terms are usually recorded in a written settlement agreement that becomes binding once signed.

The settlement agreement may include financial terms, confidentiality provisions, non-financial commitments, clarifications about future conduct or any other terms the parties wish to include.

If the dispute does not settle on the day, the process is still valuable. Parties leave with a clearer understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of their case, an appreciation of the opponent’s priorities a more realistic sense of risk and a foundation for further negotiation. Many settlements occur shortly after mediation as a result.

Who Benefits From Mediation?

Individuals

Individuals benefit from the confidentiality and the reduced emotional and financial strain.

Those with public reputations or sensitive personal issues often require privacy that only mediation can provide.

Businesses

Commercial disputes are costly and can disrupt operations and damage relationships. Mediation can preserve commercial partnerships that litigation would destroy.

Professionals

Professionals who fear reputational damage or regulatory implications often find mediation the safest environment in which to conclude a dispute without escalation.

Lawyers

Lawyers benefit from the process as it tests the strength of the case early,  reduces uncertainty and offers clients a flexible and cost effective route to resolve the matter.

Conclusion

Mediation has become the most effective and proportionate method of resolving civil disputes. It provides confidentiality, flexibility, control and efficiency, with the benefit of avoiding unnecessary risk. It is necessary for compliance with the Civil Procedure Rules and to avoid cost consequences.

Litigation has an essential role in society. However, it should be reserved for the disputes that genuinely require judicial determination. In most cases, mediation provides a structured, rational and humane alternative that offers parties the opportunity to resolve their dispute with dignity and certainty.

If you require guidance on whether mediation is appropriate in your case or how to prepare for the process, please contact us for specialist advice.

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