The Handbook of
Divorce Mediation
by Lenard Marlow & S. Richard
Sauber New York: Plenum Press, 1990 Reviewed by: Carl D. Schneider
This is a fascinating and,
at times, maddening book. Marlow and Sauber have written a book like few
others in the field. Most mediators have made a kind of peace with attorneys
and the adversary system, and tend to practice out of stance which might
be characterized as complementary and collegial. Not the present book.
Marlow and Sauber throw down the
gauntlet. They wish to take on the adversary system directly, and they
make a sustained case that the adversary system is in fact fundamentally
harmful to parties, fails to live up to its representations that it protects
clients, and is counterproductive to achieving settlements. They place
themselves squarely in the breach, attempting to stem what they call "the
unthinking incorporation into mediation practice of concerns based upon
adversarial principles, principles that have nothing to do, and which
are inconsistent, with those that should properly inform divorce mediation."
No accommodators or appeasers here.
The book is full of quotable take-no-prisoners
prose: the effect, Marlow and Sauber write, of the adversary system's
characterizing the divorce dispute "in terms of legal rights has been
to have dipped each of the parties in legal cement, and, as they will
soon find out, it is also very fast-drying cement."
Marlow and Sauber at times throw
out pearls that frame well-worn old issues in fresh ways. Regarding the
issue of "discovery" and full disclosure of assets, they say, "To be sure,
people do lie on occasion, but they also tell the truth. Thus, the question
is not whether people are honest or are liars, but rather what circumstances
and conditions (in what context) they are more likely to lie or more likely
to tell the truth."
Again, regarding "having cast the
proceedings in a context that encourages the parties to dig deep holes
in which to hide their valuables, it then becomes necessary to provide
each of them with shovels to uncover them." They go on, matrimonial attorneys
"will not find very much. The world is a very big place in which to hide
things, and it is a lot easier to hide them than it is to find them."
The chapter on "Context" is a very
rich and thought-provoking one. Marlow and Sauber argue that mediation
is "not by definition a negotiating process[!]" Instead, they argue that
it is best viewed as one of "mediating in a common cause," and that "the
question is not what kind of a process divorce mediation is, it is what
kind of process we wish it to be... what you see is what you get."
I applaud Marlow and Sauber in
making a strong argument for their position, but fear that their language
and stance in some areas will lead many to dismiss the book without really
engaging its authors in their thought-provoking essay. Probably most disturbing
is their treatment of the domestic violence issue, which is mentioned
only in passing, as one of several items the authors think it is "misguided
and ill-advised" to inquire about in the initial session. Similarly, though
a proponent of joint custody myself, I thought unfortunate their characterization
of women's groups opposed to joint custody as those for whom "when the
yardstick of "fair" conflicts with what is best for women, that yardstick
is simply discarded... these groups do not want what is fair for women;
they only want what is best for them."
Marlow and Sauber see their book
as one that would serve as both an introductory text as well as a guide
for experienced mediators. The authors, however, have a great many things
for which they do not present the pros and cons, but take a firm position
on. Examples: mediators should use an "advisory attorney;" opposition
to formal written agreements to mediate; seeing children in mediation
should generally "not be done"; parenting issues should be mediated before
financial issues; mediators should simply accept that "confidentiality
does not exist" for mediation; mediators should "avoid" caucusing, and
so on. In this respect, I think the book better advised for experienced
mediators.
Regardless of our response to particular
positions they take, Marlow and Sauber have done us the service of presenting
a book introducing divorce mediation not simply in terms of technique,
but as a practice which grows out of a thought-through perspective.
Reviewed by Carl D. Schneider,
Ph.D., Atlanta, Georgia
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