School of Law Launches Hugh L. Carey Center for Dispute Resolution

September 22, 2009

On Thursday, September 17, 2009, St. John’s University School of Law celebrated the launch of the Hugh L. Carey Center for Dispute Resolution with a reception at the University’s Manhattan Campus. 

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Made possible through the generosity of Governor Hugh L. Carey, ’42, ‘51L, the Carey Center seeks to promote both the value and the practice of conflict resolution on a local, national, and global level. 

The new Center reflects St. John’s’ commitment to develop a nationally recognized program in the growing area of alternative dispute resolution.  In fields as varied as international trade, commercial transactions, securities law, family law, landlord-tenant, employment relations, and many others, new paradigms of dispute resolution are emerging.  Both by choice and by necessity, disputants and their lawyers now navigate a wide range of dispute resolution options.
 
The Carey Center will make St. John’s a leader in this vital field.  Through clinics, externships, and other programs, the Carey Center will train a new generation of lawyers in the skills of dispute resolution to ensure that individuals engaged in conflict have access to fair, just, and expeditious dispute resolution processes. 

In the words of School of Law Dean Michael A. Simons, “The Carey Center will be a way for us to bring together students, faculty, and lawyers, to develop, to share, and think about the skills involved in dispute resolution.” 

Drawing on the resources of the entire University, the Carey Center will also serve as a forum for the academic investigation of dispute resolution processes.  It will coordinate the efforts of the many outstanding faculty members at St. John’s doing work in the field of dispute resolution. 

“I see tonight a tremendous gathering [of faculty] who are in the Law School and have chosen this particular effort to show that St. John’s is moving forward, leading, and is one great institution,” said Governor Carey. 

By emphasizing the value of conflict resolution in addition to teaching the practice, the Carey Center represents a unique approach to alternative dispute resolution.  Elayne Greenberg, Director of the Carey Center, praised Governor Carey for his recognition of the value of conflict resolution and stressed that the Carey Center will embody that commitment.  “It’s very easy to teach students and practitioners the skills of dispute resolution,” she said, “but it’s so much harder to help them understand conflict resolution as a value.”

The Carey Center has a full schedule of upcoming programs, including the Securities Dispute Resolution Triathlon, a competition co-hosted with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority that will be the first in the nation to bring together negotiation, mediation, and arbitration in a single event.  A conference on the burgeoning role of alternative dispute resolution in bankruptcy, co-hosted with the American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review and the Bankruptcy Policy Institute at St. John’s, is also being planned. 

Future initiatives will bring together other University departments and use the University’s overseas campuses in Rome and Paris, such as a planned joint program with The Peter J. Tobin College of Business to bring business and law students together to study negotiation and dispute resolution at the Rome Campus.

“Given the resources St. John’s offers and the dedication of our faculty involved in dispute resolution, we see no limit to where the Carey Center can go,” said Professor Paul F. Kirgis, Faculty Chair of the Carey Center.