Resolving Conflict, Preserving Dignity
Legal issues are ranked as life's most stressful situations. The traditional adversarial system often compounds this pain. There is a better way: Collaborative Law.
Air Force Suicide Prevention Study
"Legal problems were the number one contributing factor in suicidal ideation."
The Cost of Conflict
The adversarial system ("Litigation") is designed as a zero-sum game. Lawyers focus on fighting and strategy, often creating opacity and anxiety. Financially and emotionally, the toll is immense.
The Financial Burden
Traditional attorneys often charge $400+ per hour, billed in 6-minute increments. This billing model discourages communication and review, leaving clients in the dark. Collaborative cases typically cost significantly less due to the efficiency of the "Team" model.
The Emotional Toll
Litigation spikes anxiety, decreases control, and often destroys relationships. Collaborative Law focuses on "Interest-Based Negotiation" rather than "Positional Bargaining," aiming to preserve relationships and reduce trauma.
A Paradigm Shift
Moving from a "Gladiator" mentality to a "Problem Solver" mindset. Click on the cards below to explore the differences.
⚔️ Adversarial / Litigation
- × Goal: Win / Lose. Maximize personal share at other's expense.
- × Strategy: Deception, hiding information ("Hide the Ball"), abrasive arguments.
- × Communication: Through lawyers only. High conflict.
- × Outcome: Court-imposed decision. Relationships often destroyed.
🤝 Collaborative Law
- ✓ Goal: Resolution / Settlement. Win / Win for the entire family.
- ✓ Strategy: Open transparency. Voluntary exchange of all information.
- ✓ Communication: 4-way meetings (Clients + Lawyers + Team). Safe space.
- ✓ Outcome: Mutually acceptable agreement. Relationships preserved.
The Disqualification Clause
The "engine" of Collaborative Law: Both lawyers sign an agreement that if the process fails and goes to court, they must withdraw and cannot represent the clients in litigation. This removes the threat of court and incentivizes settlement.
The Interdisciplinary Team
Lawyers aren't trained to be therapists or financial analysts. In the Collaborative Model, you are supported by experts in each field. Click a role below to understand how they help you.
Select a Role
Click on the team members on the left to see how they function within the Collaborative Law model to reduce stress and cost.
The Pathway to Peace
The process is structured to provide clarity and safety at every step, removing the "ambiguity" that plagues litigation.
1. Participation Agreement
The foundation. All parties sign a contract committing to transparency and agreeing that if they go to court, the entire professional team withdraws.
Creates a safe "container" for negotiation.
2. Information Gathering
The Financial Neutral gathers all data openly. No discovery battles. No hiding assets. Both sides work from the same set of numbers.
Removes suspicion and reduces duplication of effort.
3. Option Generation
Brainstorming without commitment. The team generates creative solutions based on interests (e.g., "I need security") rather than positions (e.g., "I want the house").
Allows for custom solutions the court cannot order.
4. Resolution
A durable agreement is drafted and signed. Because both parties helped create it, compliance rates are significantly higher than court orders.
The legal matter ends, but the family relationship survives.
The Evidence & Resources
IACP Practice Survey Data (Full agreements reached)
vs 18+ Months for Litigation
Even with difficult outcomes, process satisfaction is superior.
Annotated Bibliography & Key Voices
Stu Webb & Ron Ousky
The Collaborative Way to Divorce (2006)
The manifesto by the founder (Webb). Explains the origins of the "Disqualification Clause" and the move away from the "war" model.
Pauline Tesler
Collaborative Law: Achieving Effective Resolution (2008)
The definitive textbook. Deconstructs "zealous advocacy" and teaches "interest-based negotiation."
Uniform Law Commission
Uniform Collaborative Law Act (2009)
Legitimizes the process, creating a legal privilege for communications to protect privacy and transparency.
Susan Daicoff
Lawyer, Know Thyself (2006)
Analyzes the psychology of lawyers, explaining why they struggle to communicate with empathy and how Collaborative Law addresses this.