The phrase "privileged against disclosure" clarifies the type |
of expectations that the record must demonstrate tin order to |
show an expectation of confidentiality in a subsequent legal |
setting. Mere generalized expectations of confidentiality in a |
non-legal setting are not enough to trigger the Act if the |
case does not fit under Sections 3(a)(1) or 3(a)(3). Take for |
example a dispute in a university between the heads of the |
Spanish and Latin departments that is mediated or "worked out |
informally" with the assistance of the head of the French |
department, at the suggestion of the university provost. Such |
a mediation would not reasonably carry with it party or |
mediator expectations that the mediation would be conducted |
pursuant to an evidentiary privilege, rights of disclosure and |
accompaniment and the other protections and obligations of the |
Act. Indeed, some of the parties and the mediator may more |
reasonably expect that the mediation results, and even the |
underlying discussions, would be disclosed to the university |
provost, and perhaps communicated throughout the parties' |
respective departments and elsewhere on campus. By contrast, |
however, if the university has a written policy regarding the |
mediation of disputes that embraces the Act, and the mediation |
is specifically conducted pursuant to that policy, and the |
parties agree to participate in mediation in a record signed |
by the parties, then the parties would reasonably expect that |
the Act would apply and conduct themselves accordingly, both |
in the mediation and beyond. |