Arbitration & Mediation Services in Kentucky Near Me, page 12
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Newell, Richard F. Attorney
Louisville,
Kentucky
Administrative & Governmental Lawyers - Appeals Lawyers - Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys
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Art of Serenity
Bowling Green,
Kentucky
Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys
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Gray, Elisabeth Summers Attorney
Louisville,
Kentucky
Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys - Trial Lawyers
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Daniel T. Albers Sr.
Louisville,
Kentucky
Accident Lawyers - Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Vehicular Accident Lawyers
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Karem, Edmund Pete Attorney
Louisville,
Kentucky
Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys
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Carwell, Keith M. Attorney
Bowling Green,
Kentucky
Administrative & Governmental Lawyers - Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Banking & Investment Lawyers - Bankruptcy Lawyers
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Stuart Norris Pearlman Law Offices
Louisville,
Kentucky
Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys - Criminal Defense Lawyers
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Ragland, Sandra G. Attorney
Louisville,
Kentucky
Adoption Lawyers - Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Brooks, Robert M. Attorney
Louisville,
Kentucky
Appeals Lawyers - Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys - Attorneys - Construction Lawyers - Employment & Labor Lawyers
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Families Solving Family Problems
Elizabethtown,
Kentucky
Arbitration & Mediation Services - Arbitration & Mediation Services Attorneys
155 Lawyer(s)
Arbitration is an alternative means of setttling a dispute by impartial persons without proceeding to a court trial. It is sometimes preferred as a means of settling a matter in ordert to avoid the expense, delay, and acrimony of litigation. There is no discovery and there are simplified rules of evidence in arbitration. The arbitrator or arbitrators are selected directly by the parties or are chosen in accordance with the terms of a contract in which the parties have agreed to use a court-ordered arbitrator or an arbitrator from the American Arbitration Association. If there is no contract, usually each party chooses an arbitrator and the two arbitrators select a third to comprise the panel. When parties submit to arbitration, they agree to be bound by and comply with the arbitrators' decision. The arbitrators' decision is given after an informal proceeding where each side presents evidence and witnesses. Arbitration hearings usually last only a few hours and the opinions are not public record. Arbitration has long been used in labor, construction, and securities regulation, but is now gaining popularity in other business disputes.