How do you get people to eat more fruit and less junk food?

How do you get more people to agree to donate their organs?

How do you get more people to engage in cross-border mediation?

I’ll come back to food and organs shortly. Let’s stay with mediation for a minute.

Within Asia, Hong Kong, Singapore and other centres are positioning themselves as regional leaders in cross-border mediation. Statistically though, there is not an enormous amount of cross-border mediation going on. International arbitration remains the process of choice.

At mediation conferences and other get-togethers, mediators and other ADR advocates ask themselves, why?

Some say it’s the lack of an international legal framework for enforcement of mediated settlements; they say that mediation needs it’s own New York Convention (as arbitration has). Others suggest that blended processes such as arb-med-arb are the answer. Here mediated settlements take the form of an arbitral consent award, so that arguably the New York Convention will apply and therefore enforcement concerns will be alleviated.

Yet others talk about the quality of mediators and the need for a large and reliable international pool of professional mediators before cross-border mediation becomes as ubiquitous as cross-border arbitration.

Of course, it would make sense to ask users of mediation what they need and what would make mediation more attractive. There are numerous international user surveys available, many of which are summarised in the report of the Singapore Working Group on International Commercial Mediation. To a large extent they reinforce the previous suggestions — that enforceability of mediated settlements is important to users, as is confidentiality and competent mediators, and that international users are open to using mediation in an arbitration context.

So far so good.

But how will this information change people’s behaviour? While it’s true that there is no New York Convention for Mediation (yet), blended processes such as med-arb and arb-med-arb have long existed in many parts of the world. While it’s fair to say that that an international mediation profession is in its early stages, there are many excellent international mediators with thriving practices. In many countries, confidentiality is increasingly regulated in a uniform way by national statutes, thereby offering legal certainty about the scope of confidentiality and related matters in mediation.

You see, there is one thing that the users in these surveys have in common — they are human. What do we know about ourselves as human beings? For starters, we don’t always mean what we say, and, no matter how optimistic and confident we are, we don’t always do what we say we will do.

I’ve been reading a book called NUDGE by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein. NUDGE draws on the emerging sciences of being human — behavioural economics, neuroscience, neuro-economics, and behavioural psychology. The authors explain that we are not — as traditional economics would have us believe — rational actors. We are imperfect human beings who act irrationally but in a predictably irrational way.

That means that don’t always do what’s good for us. But if we are given a NUDGE, it can make the world of difference to our choices. Nudging is a way to help people make good decisions. It does not involve using rational arguments to persuade people (e.g. mediation information sessions that explain why mediation is good for you ), coercion (e.g. using financial or other sanctions to ensure participation in mediation) and bans (e.g. no litigating or arbitrating until you have mediated).

Neuroscientists tell us that people don’t like being told what to do. There is a button in our brain (I call it the injustice button — of course it’s not really a button, but you know what i mean) that starts buzzing when we think something is unfair — for instance, when someone is making decisions for us, telling us what to do (e.g. mandating mediation) or telling us what not to do (e.g. don’t litigate). The buzzing goes off in the same area of the brain that is activated when we feel pain. Ouch! Now, some people are going to resent being told what to do, and for that reason alone, will refuse to play ball. In Hong Kong, for example, Practice Direction 31 requires parties to mediate before trial in all cases where it is reasonable to do so. With a pro-mediation judiciary, that means in virtually all cases. Most lawyers seem to encourage their clients to comply with the requirement reasonably well. However, it is well-known that a minority of lawyers pay lip service to the requirement, treat it as a another step towards litigation, and participate in very short mediations with no intention of settling. While this is only a minority, it negatively impacts on the development of mediation by giving users poor experiences of the process.

NUDGEs use the science of being human to gently push people in a certain direction while still allowing people to choose.

The authors call this “choice architecture”. Insofar as we can indirectly influence choice, we are choice architects: governments, mediation service providers, mediation accreditation institutes, mediators, mediation advocates, academics — all of us. We cannot not influence. Therefore let us be aware of how we do influence.

Back to our questions at the start of this posting.

How do you get people to eat more fruit and less junk food? Thaler and Sunstein report on research showing that the simple action of putting fruit on shelves at eye level in a cafeteria increased fruit consumption by 25%. Moving junk food away from the shelves at eye level decreased consumption of junk food by 25%.

How do you get more people to agree to donate their organs ? Here Thaler and Sunstein report on research showing the power of human inertia and how much we hate ticking forms. In Germany the relevant form asks people to tick if they wish to be an organ donor. 12% of people tick the box. In Austria, the same form asks people to tick the box if they do not want to donate. 1% of people tick the box. So 99% of people agree to be organ donors. Amazing, isn’t it?

So, how can we use the principles of NUDGE to get more people to engage in cross-border mediation? Let me start the conversation with a few simple ideas.

First, as we have seen, inertia is a strong force. People like the path of least resistance. So opt-out of mediation provisions are going to be much more effective that opt-in provisions. They still give people as much choice as opt-in provisions but don’t require them to “tick the box”. We saw this in the United States, in the 1990s, where court programmes allowing lawyers to opt-out of ADR saw 80% of lawyers stay with ADR. Where court programmes had opt-in provisions, hardly anyone opted for ADR (less than 20%). See Rosenberg and Folberg (1994).

For cross-border mediation, international mediation service providers might think about offering one standard dispute resolution clause with opt-out provisions.

Mediation service providers might also work with international corporates and government departments to develop mediation and ADR policies featuring opt-out provisions rather than mandatory provisions or opt-in provisions.

Can bar associations and law societies nudge lawyers to include provisions in their standard client agreements with mediate first clauses that include opt-out provisions? It’s hard to find an argument not to include the clause if you have the power to opt out.

Apart from being stricken by inertia, we human beings are overwhelmed by choice. Too much choice will lead to procrastination. So don’t give clients the whole ADR menu and ask them to choose. That’s not being user friendly.

As soon as we have to choose among three things with more than one criteria to compare them, we tend to get lost. Remember the well-known Economist advertisement? For an annual subscription to the Economist, you could choose from:
1. The Economist.com online subscription for $59.00
2. Print subscription for $125.00
3. Print and web subscription for $125.00
With these choices, most people will pick 3) because they compare it to 2) and seem to forget about 1). If you take away choice 3) and people are left to choose between 1) and 2), many more people will choose 1). This is choice architecture in action!
So if what about offering:
1) Arbitration: $ 10 000 per arbitrator per day
2) Mediation: $ 10 000 per mediator per day
3) Arbitration with mediation: $ 10 000 per mediator/arbitrator per day.

Okay, maybe it needs some refinement. But let’s start thinking about how to use the science of human decision-making to help people manage complex choices. Nudging can play a role in shaping both marketing and policy along with other incentives.


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One comment

  1. Hi Nadja – A slightly belated response to your comment on “bringing the horses to water”, so to speak. A couple of thoughts on this – not least just a reflection on this a part of the perennial balancing of, or tension between the values of autonomy and ‘encouragement’ [the softer version of compulsion]. You’ll recall that NADRAC was part of such a conversation years ago – at least a couple of decades ago – in Australia – and I suspect that it remains unresolved.

    One preliminary thought on this process of encouraging people to use mediation, in addition to your suggestions: more than a decade ago, the Wellington District Law Society’s Committee on Dispute Resolution set up a “mediation week” during which professional mediators (mostly but not entirely LEADR, I recall) offered mediation for a nominal fee for those cases that had been languishing in lawyers’ files for way too long. In part, it was an exercise in showcasing mediation; in part is was a genuine ‘access to justice’ idea: if those files had been sitting unattended for too long, this was a chance to gain some traction.

    Predictably, there was resistance from within the profession, at that time less informed about mediation – and the resistance was in part self-interested. I recall one lawyer’s anguished cry: “What will happen to my fees?” It needed to be gently suggested that, to earn his fees, he needed to do something with the file.

    Still, one option to gain visibility for mediation might be such a project – in whatever jurisdiction we find ourselves.

    The other point, in response to your suggestions on Sunstein/Thaler’s “nudge” idea is to note a recent article in The Atlantic in which the rather more conservative wing in Republican public life has now decided that Sunstein is “the most dangerous man in America”. See http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/05/our-nudge-in-chief/359804/

    That there is such a reaction suggests to me that he’s got something right. While I am cautious about behavioural economics and ethics, I do see that there are considerable insights – including from the work of Dan Ariely – into (i) the illusions of rationality and (ii) ways in which we might improve decision making.

    At least this nomination for the “most dangerous” award might take some of the heat off Prof Peter Singer, the US-based Australian philosopher, who has been similarly described. He is certainly provocative; but this at least tells us that new ideas remain dangerous to the guardians of normality.

    So, Nadja – this “dangerous” notion of wanting to encourage people to try to settle their own disputes, to engage in dialogue and conversation, is worth pursuing. At some stage, the crackpot with become the new normal.

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