INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000

<p>How can be explained the dramatic changes in the growth of informal dispute resolution as “alternatives” to adjudication between 1970-2000?  This article gives an answer to this question by using the historical case of U.S. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) in the last third of the 20<...

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Main Author: Calvin Morrill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rede de Pesquisa Empírica em Direito 2017-02-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Empirical Legal Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.reedpesquisa.org/ojs-2.4.3/index.php/reed/article/view/198
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spelling doaj-fa41770475cf40babc4ac37dae6a86792020-11-25T00:59:36ZengRede de Pesquisa Empírica em DireitoBrazilian Journal of Empirical Legal Studies2319-08172319-08172017-02-014110.19092/reed.v4i1.198103INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000Calvin Morrill0REED<p>How can be explained the dramatic changes in the growth of informal dispute resolution as “alternatives” to adjudication between 1970-2000?  This article gives an answer to this question by using the historical case of U.S. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) in the last third of the 20<sup>th</sup> century to ground empirically a theory of <em>interstitial emergence</em>.  By focusing on interstitial emergence, the article demonstrates how informal interaction across multiple organizational fields can provide cultural accounts for new formal structures. The analysis furthers the integration between institutional analysis in organizational and legal sociology, but does so by borrowing conceptual leads from social movement theory to elaborate and develop a framework for understanding institutional innovation and change.  In doing so, it draws specific attention to issues of agency and emergent signification. The remainder of the article contains sections that narratively illustrate interstitial emergence and its dimensions using evidence from the U.S. ADR case. The conclusion extends the argument beyond ADR to consider alternative developments in the U.S. medical field and implications for institutional analysis, more generally.</p>http://www.reedpesquisa.org/ojs-2.4.3/index.php/reed/article/view/198Institutional changeAlternative Dispute ResolutionInterstitial emergence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Calvin Morrill
spellingShingle Calvin Morrill
INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
Brazilian Journal of Empirical Legal Studies
Institutional change
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Interstitial emergence
author_facet Calvin Morrill
author_sort Calvin Morrill
title INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
title_short INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
title_full INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
title_fullStr INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
title_full_unstemmed INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE THROUGH INTERSTITIAL EMERGENCE: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in U.S. Law, 1970-2000
title_sort institutional change through interstitial emergence: the growth of alternative dispute resolution in u.s. law, 1970-2000
publisher Rede de Pesquisa Empírica em Direito
series Brazilian Journal of Empirical Legal Studies
issn 2319-0817
2319-0817
publishDate 2017-02-01
description <p>How can be explained the dramatic changes in the growth of informal dispute resolution as “alternatives” to adjudication between 1970-2000?  This article gives an answer to this question by using the historical case of U.S. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) in the last third of the 20<sup>th</sup> century to ground empirically a theory of <em>interstitial emergence</em>.  By focusing on interstitial emergence, the article demonstrates how informal interaction across multiple organizational fields can provide cultural accounts for new formal structures. The analysis furthers the integration between institutional analysis in organizational and legal sociology, but does so by borrowing conceptual leads from social movement theory to elaborate and develop a framework for understanding institutional innovation and change.  In doing so, it draws specific attention to issues of agency and emergent signification. The remainder of the article contains sections that narratively illustrate interstitial emergence and its dimensions using evidence from the U.S. ADR case. The conclusion extends the argument beyond ADR to consider alternative developments in the U.S. medical field and implications for institutional analysis, more generally.</p>
topic Institutional change
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Interstitial emergence
url http://www.reedpesquisa.org/ojs-2.4.3/index.php/reed/article/view/198
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