To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts

For many years, the courts have been grappling with the paradox of marriages—the most intimate of relationships—being dissolved in the courts that represent a public and adversarial setting. Despite the growth of divorce interventions, the perennial struggle remains in many courts on how to reduce t...

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Main Authors: Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON, CHUA, Eunice, NING, Yilin
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3934
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5892/viewcontent/Examining_the_Durability_of_Divorce_Outcomes_in_the_Singapore_Family_Courts_SubmittedVersion.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-58922022-12-27T09:25:16Z To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON, CHUA, Eunice NING, Yilin For many years, the courts have been grappling with the paradox of marriages—the most intimate of relationships—being dissolved in the courts that represent a public and adversarial setting. Despite the growth of divorce interventions, the perennial struggle remains in many courts on how to reduce the intense acrimony of divorce litigation. The question remains on the scope of “mainstream” interventions to be offered by the courts to divorce litigants. The current study therefore explores the use of court-connected negotiation, mediation, and litigation in the Singapore Family Justice Courts. It uses a statistical method of survival analysis to produce insights on re-litigation trends over time and to predict the future risk of re-litigation. Mediated divorces were found to have consistently higher durability than litigated cases and negotiated settlements. Negotiated divorce outcomes had the worst durability when the survival analysis was done in relation to re-litigation caused by extraneous factors. These findings strongly suggest that mediation should be a highly recommended mode of dispute resolution for divorcing parties, especially when there are children to the marriage, and that there are benefits of having a neutral third party to help the parties reach a sustainable settlement. 2022-07-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3934 info:doi/10.1111/fcre.12661 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5892/viewcontent/Examining_the_Durability_of_Divorce_Outcomes_in_the_Singapore_Family_Courts_SubmittedVersion.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University divorce mediation divorce re-litigation durability negotiation survival analysis Asian Studies Dispute Resolution and Arbitration Family Law
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic divorce mediation
divorce re-litigation
durability
negotiation
survival analysis
Asian Studies
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
Family Law
spellingShingle divorce mediation
divorce re-litigation
durability
negotiation
survival analysis
Asian Studies
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
Family Law
Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON,
CHUA, Eunice
NING, Yilin
To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
description For many years, the courts have been grappling with the paradox of marriages—the most intimate of relationships—being dissolved in the courts that represent a public and adversarial setting. Despite the growth of divorce interventions, the perennial struggle remains in many courts on how to reduce the intense acrimony of divorce litigation. The question remains on the scope of “mainstream” interventions to be offered by the courts to divorce litigants. The current study therefore explores the use of court-connected negotiation, mediation, and litigation in the Singapore Family Justice Courts. It uses a statistical method of survival analysis to produce insights on re-litigation trends over time and to predict the future risk of re-litigation. Mediated divorces were found to have consistently higher durability than litigated cases and negotiated settlements. Negotiated divorce outcomes had the worst durability when the survival analysis was done in relation to re-litigation caused by extraneous factors. These findings strongly suggest that mediation should be a highly recommended mode of dispute resolution for divorcing parties, especially when there are children to the marriage, and that there are benefits of having a neutral third party to help the parties reach a sustainable settlement.
format text
author Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON,
CHUA, Eunice
NING, Yilin
author_facet Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON,
CHUA, Eunice
NING, Yilin
author_sort Dorcas QUEK ANDERSON,
title To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
title_short To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
title_full To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
title_fullStr To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
title_full_unstemmed To negotiate, mediate or litigate? Examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the Singapore family courts
title_sort to negotiate, mediate or litigate? examining the durability of divorce outcomes in the singapore family courts
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3934
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5892/viewcontent/Examining_the_Durability_of_Divorce_Outcomes_in_the_Singapore_Family_Courts_SubmittedVersion.pdf
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