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ADR should be a part of the school curriculum not as an elective but as a compulsory course because it is also available in litigation. What this does is that it creates a balanced story rather than a one-sided story, as is the case in Nigeria and the United Kingdom. In the university system or educational system, ninety-three (93%) of education is focused on litigation in the university and law schools in Nigeria & most jurisdictions, which means that only Seven (7%) of the teaching is ADR. This is largely because ADR is not a compulsory course but an elective. That means if students graduate eventually, their first port of call is Litigation.
Generally, there is bias everywhere, especially where someone is not yet familiar with the subject matter – humans tend to either criticise or ignore what they are not familiar with. The human mind is such that it takes something that it does not know and shoves it into one category in its mind, and sometimes, this knowledge is inaccurate. The one thing that takes away bias beyond every other thing is personal experience via awareness. if more lawyers train to become mediators, they will create more opportunities to let their expertise be known. More so, awareness campaigns-opportunities whereby traditional leaders, and religious leaders, who have a substantial influence in society, lend words of credence &endorse the use of the ADR; MDC platforms would be a significant step in the right direction. It will go a long way to sensitise the subject matter. The podcaster recommends that MDC in Nigeria/ADR Centers create a podcast channel to disseminate the use of ADR; the wordings used will be simple words so-non-specialist can easily understand, and this will be distributed on other social media platforms. However, informal training from home should come; first, parents should teach their children about ADR.
By Dr Chinwe Egbunike-Umegbolu5
22 ratings
ADR should be a part of the school curriculum not as an elective but as a compulsory course because it is also available in litigation. What this does is that it creates a balanced story rather than a one-sided story, as is the case in Nigeria and the United Kingdom. In the university system or educational system, ninety-three (93%) of education is focused on litigation in the university and law schools in Nigeria & most jurisdictions, which means that only Seven (7%) of the teaching is ADR. This is largely because ADR is not a compulsory course but an elective. That means if students graduate eventually, their first port of call is Litigation.
Generally, there is bias everywhere, especially where someone is not yet familiar with the subject matter – humans tend to either criticise or ignore what they are not familiar with. The human mind is such that it takes something that it does not know and shoves it into one category in its mind, and sometimes, this knowledge is inaccurate. The one thing that takes away bias beyond every other thing is personal experience via awareness. if more lawyers train to become mediators, they will create more opportunities to let their expertise be known. More so, awareness campaigns-opportunities whereby traditional leaders, and religious leaders, who have a substantial influence in society, lend words of credence &endorse the use of the ADR; MDC platforms would be a significant step in the right direction. It will go a long way to sensitise the subject matter. The podcaster recommends that MDC in Nigeria/ADR Centers create a podcast channel to disseminate the use of ADR; the wordings used will be simple words so-non-specialist can easily understand, and this will be distributed on other social media platforms. However, informal training from home should come; first, parents should teach their children about ADR.