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How to stay out of court

By: Language: English Series: Estates Gazette ; (0601) 7 January 2006, 91-92(2)Publication details: 2006Subject(s): Summary: The majority of dilapidations disputes are resolved between the parties without recourse to litigation. Considers the alternative means of dispute resolution which may offer distinct advantages over litigation where disputes cannot be resolved by agreement: arbitration, independent expert determination, mediation particularly in multi-party disputes and early expert evaluation. Concludes that no resolution process is universally appropriate for all disputes and flags up dispute resolution services such as offered by RICS.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Journal article London Journal article L132119 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 132119-1001

The majority of dilapidations disputes are resolved between the parties without recourse to litigation. Considers the alternative means of dispute resolution which may offer distinct advantages over litigation where disputes cannot be resolved by agreement: arbitration, independent expert determination, mediation particularly in multi-party disputes and early expert evaluation. Concludes that no resolution process is universally appropriate for all disputes and flags up dispute resolution services such as offered by RICS.