| | In applying and construing this chapter, consideration | should be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law | with respect to its subject matter among states that enact it. |
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| One of the goals of the Uniform Mediation Act is to simplify | the law regarding mediation. Another is to make the law | uniform among the States. In most instances, the Act will | render unnecessary the other hundreds of different privilege | statutes among the States, and these can be repealed. In fact, | to do otherwise would interfere with the uniformity of the | law. |
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| However, the Drafters contemplate the Act as a floor in many | aspects, rather than a ceiling, one that provides a uniform | starting point for mediation but which respects the diversity | in contexts, cultures, and community traditions by permitting | states to retain specific features that have been tried and | that work well in that state, but which need not necessarily | be uniform. For example, as noted after Section 4, those | States that provide specially that mediators cannot testify | and impose damages from wrongful subpoena may elect to retain | such provisions. Similarly, as discussed in the comments to | Section 8, States with court rules that have confidentiality | provisions barring the disclosure of mediation communications | outside the context of proceedings may wish to retain those | provisions because they are not inconsistent with the Act. |
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| As discussed in the preface, point 5, the constructive role of | certain laws regarding mediation can be performed effectively | only if the provisions are uniform across the States. See | generally James J. Brudney, Mediation and Some Lessons from | the Uniform State Law Experience, 13 Ohio St. J. on Disp. | Resol. 795 (1998). In this regard, the law may serve to | provide not only uniformity of treatment of mediation in | certain legal contexts, but can serve to help define what | reasonable expectations may be with regard to mediation. The | certainty that flows from uniformity of interpretation can | serve to promote local, state, and national interests in the | expansive use of mediation as an important means of dispute | resolution. |
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| While the Drafters recognize that some such variations of the | mediation law are inevitable given the diverse nature of | mediation, the specific benefits of uniformity should also be | emphasized. As discussed in the Prefatory Notes, uniform | adoption of the UMA will make the law of mediation more | accessible and certain in these key areas. Practitioners and | participants will know where to find the law, and they and | courts can reasonably anticipate how the statute will be | interpreted. Moreover, |
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