Why I am a fan of mediation
Last month, I spoke at a conference for young European personal injury lawyers (PEOPIL). One of the topics covered was mediation. I was surprised to learn that mediation is virtually not used in personal injurybusiness in countries around us, for example in England.
I am a fan of mediation. I see many benefits to getting parties in one room, and starting the conversation with each other. Victims often don't feel heard or taken seriously in a personal injury case. An insurer does not always have a good view of a victim. I find that in personal injury cases there is often a lack of mutual understanding. The communication does not always run smoothly, and sometimes goes over too many stages.
Mediation can be a suitable means to lift communication to a higher level, and to reach a solution together. There is room for the victim's emotions, as well as for the interests of the insurer. Especially in long-term personal injury cases, often cases in which the causal link between the accident and the victim's complaints is disputed, mediation can be a solution.
Mediation is based on voluntariness and confidentiality. You cannot force a party to participate in mediation by going to court. What is discussed during mediation is confidential and does not leave the mediation room. The mediator has an important role as a process facilitator, but is not a judge. It is the parties themselves who put forward the solution to the dispute.
But it's not all roses. A mediation usually takes a (long) day, and clients often experience it as a war of attrition. Emotions can run high. Around three o'clock in the afternoon during a mediation, I often wonder how on earth we can come to a solution because the positions are (seem to be) so far apart.
And sometimes we don't succeed in finding a solution together. But then there has been real contact between my client and the insurer, and that alone is pure profit.
My officemates August Van and Mirella Hartman are registered mediators. I see an important role for the application of mediation in personal injury cases in the Netherlands. And hopefully, in time, our Brexit friends will also warm to mediation in personal injury cases.
Amsterdam, March 16, 2023
If you have questions about this blog, please contact the author, Laura-Jean van de Ven
