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Often we have been taught, Good Christian people are not
supposed to fight, and that is why minor irritations frequently build up
until they finally explode. What can be done to help people who find themselves
in the middle of a heated conflict? The Atlanta metropolitan area has a unique
system of dispute resolution available as a free service to the community. The
Neighborhood Justice Center of Atlanta, Inc., at 976 Edgewood Avenue, NE,
offers a practical and effective alternative to court action.
Operating as a non-profit organization, the NJCA is designed to
help people settle their differences amiably without going through the
expensive, slow, and often alienating court process. The key concept is
mediation helping others to come to a settlement with which they can
live.
NJCA offers a mediation service in which both disputing parties
come to the center to discuss their differences on a personal level. The
mediations take place in a cordial, non-judicial environment with a neutral
mediator who hears the case, enabling possible solutions to surface. In a
mediation the desired outcome is a written agreement signed by both parties and
the mediator. Coercion is not a facet of the NJCA. The agreement reached is a
mutual effort and is signed voluntarily, just as the presence of all concerned
is voluntary. The success of NJCA is impressive. Eighty percent of the cases
mediated reach an agreement that is satisfactory to all parties. When the cases
are followed up 90 days after mediation, 75 percent are still abiding by the
agreement.
When it began in 1977, the NJCA was part of a pilot program set up
by the federal government to ease overcrowding in the judicial system. Of the
three centers in the original program (the others were in Kansas City and Los
Angeles), the Atlanta center is the only one still operating. Due to budget
cuts, federal funding was lost in 1979, and since then it has been financed by
the United Way, city and county governments in the Atlanta area, and many
private foundations and citizens.
The staff consists of six full-time employees, three of whom have
law degrees. The center, however, is not a legal service. The staff is
responsible for obtaining operation funds, keeping an active referral system,
doing intake work on cases, and scheduling mediations. The actual mediations
are done by eighty volunteers who have gone through a very intense training
course. These mediators make up the heart of the NJCA. The mediator is
carefully matched with each ease and is someone both parties can trust and
respect.
Ms. Edith Primm, Executive Director of the center, says, No
matter how compassionate a judge may be, he or she cannot possibly devote
enough time to resolve disputes between people involved in continuing
relationships. The judge cannot be professionally concerned with why something
happened, but can only be concerned with the legality of the situation.
NJCA has discovered that more often than not underlying factors are more of a
problem than the actual incident itself. The advantage of using mediators is
that they can deal with this hidden agenda, or the why behind what
happened. In fact, many judges refer cases to the NJCA.
In an age in which litigation is so prevalent, disputes between
friends, family members, neighbors, landlord and tenant, consumer and merchant,
employer and employee are often taken to the courtrooms. As a result, the
courts are flooded with cases that require dispute resolution. The NJCA offers
an alternative to the impersonal coldness of a courtroom. During mediation,
persons involved in the settlement are treated as persons of worth who take
responsibility for living up to the agreement they will make with each other.
This process enhances a persons sense of respect for self and society and
eases the tension and hostility involved in a system that designates one party
right and the other wrong. Instead of pitting persons against each other,
mediation provides a context for working out problems together. It brings
people from all socio-economic levels, racial diversities, and religious
backgrounds together in a cooperative effort. Even clergy disputes have been
mediated at NJCA.
The Neighborhood Justice Center reflects basic theological and
Biblical presuppositions. In a world of discord and strife, the center offers a
healing ministry of reconciliation. Though the center is not affiliated with a
particular church nor professes Christian doctrine in any overt way. NJCA does
embody principles found throughout Scripture.
One of the keys to the centers great success is the way it
revolutionizes the concept of justice. So often, justice is equated with
revenge. The NJCA does not offer a way to retaliate against the other party,
but offers a way to work out differences so that people can live with each
other peaceably. In this respect, justice is no longer revenge but
reconciliation. It would seem that this kind of approach to personal problems
is inherent in the admonition to love ones neighbor as oneself. This rule
seeks not winners and losers, but harmony and reconciliation. Mediation strives
for both-and thinking in an either-or society. Most of
the cases seen at the center involve family conflict in which ongoing
relationships are essential. Complainants and respondents go into mediation
gritting teeth and ready to fight, but often come out friends. This process
encourages continuing relationships as opposed to abandoning them. And when
good people are reconciled with each other, then they can be reconciled with
God. The center affords people the opportunity to work out their differences on
neutral ground.
For more information on the Neighborhood Justice Center of
Atlanta, please call 523-8236.
(The above article was submitted by students at Emory
Universitys Candler School of Theology.) |