The Enforcement Of Mediation Settlement Agreements In China - ARIA Vol. 19 Nos. 3-4 2008
Jiaqi Liang PhD student in Political Science at School of Public Affairs of American
University; MPA, 2009, Harry S Truman School of Public Affairs, University of
Missouri; LL.M., 2007, Center for Dispute Resolution of School of Law, University of
Missouri. She is grateful to Professor Philip J. Harter, Ms. LoValerie Mullins and Mr.
Joshua Holmes for their help and input for this article.
Originally from American Review of International Arbitration - ARIA
Preview Page
THE ENFORCEMENT OF MEDIATION
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENTS IN CHINA∗
Jiaqi Liang**
I. INTRODUCTION
Mediation is a non-litigious method for dispute resolution in which the
disputants are able to exercise tremendous autonomy facilitated by a neutral third
party who has no binding authority to settle their dispute. As opposed to litigation
and arbitration, two traditional and systematically developed approaches to
resolving disputes which conclude with an adjudicative document, the mediation
settlement agreement is a consensual contract between the parties.
China is said to be the birthplace of conciliation and thus the Chinese tradition
of conciliation1 is referred to as “the Oriental Experience.”2 Today, the variants on
traditional conciliation still play a significant role in assisting the parties to resolve
their disputes and modern mediation is increasingly employed. However, there
exist concerns about the enforcement of mediation settlement agreements in
China. In contrast to worldwide issues such as improving the mediation process
and confidentiality, China has a peculiar deficiency in the area of enforcement,
despite the passion in this booming emerging economy for using mediation as the
optimal alternative dispute resolution mechanism. In the Chinese setting, the issue
of enforcement of the mediation settlement agreement3 arises from both an
implicit factor-- the intrinsic Chinese negotiation style, and the attitude toward
contract, and the explicit factor-- a degraded environment of business ethics and
deficiencies of legal and institutional support. As to these two factors, different
countermeasures are needed.
Part Two of this article will set out a general background on the issue of
enforcing mediation settlement agreements. Part Three will introduce the legal
operation of the mediation system and enforcement practices in contemporary
China. In Part Four, the article will focus on enforcing mediation settlement
agreements in China, from the standpoint of the implicit and explicit factors
respectively. Recommendations on enforcing mediation settlement agreements in
China will be discussed in Part Five. Finally, Part Six will offer concluding
comments.