U.S. Legal System Listings
The listings assembled under this resource cover the major institutions, procedural frameworks, statutory authorities, and practice areas that define dispute resolution within the U.S. legal system, with particular depth on mediation and alternative dispute resolution (ADR). The scope runs from federal agency programs governed by the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act to state-level certification regimes, private practice standards, and specialized practice contexts. Accurate directory content supports practitioners, legal researchers, and institutional users who need verified structural information rather than promotional material.
How currency is maintained
Legal directory content in the U.S. operates against a landscape of overlapping authorities. The Uniform Mediation Act, promulgated by the Uniform Law Commission, has been enacted in 12 states and the District of Columbia as of its public legislative tracking record; state adoption tables are monitored through the Uniform Law Commission's official legislative database. Federal program listings draw on agency-published documentation from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS), the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, each of which publishes annual reports and program descriptions at their respective .gov domains.
Statutory citations are cross-checked against the U.S. Code as maintained by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel (uscode.house.gov). Regulatory material references the Code of Federal Regulations through the Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR) at ecfr.gov. Where state statutes govern mediator qualification, state legislature websites serve as primary sources. No listing entry is generated from secondary aggregators without verification against a named primary source.
How to use listings alongside other resources
Listings function as a structured index — they identify entities, statutes, and programs but do not substitute for the explanatory depth found in topical pages. A practitioner researching court-connected ADR, for example, would use the court-ordered mediation topical page for procedural context, then return to listings to locate specific program names, governing rules, or credentialing bodies.
For ethical and standards questions, the model standards of conduct for mediators page provides the doctrinal framework developed jointly by the American Arbitration Association, the American Bar Association, and the Association for Conflict Resolution — three named organizations whose joint standards govern a wide share of U.S. mediator practice. Listings for individual mediator associations, state rosters, and certification programs reference those standards as the applicable benchmark.
Researchers distinguishing between process types should consult mediation vs arbitration before using listings to identify arbitration-specific bodies, since directory categories are organized by process type and conflating the two produces incorrect navigation paths.
How listings are organized
Directory entries are sorted across five classification tiers:
- Federal statutory and regulatory authority — legislation (e.g., the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996, codified at 5 U.S.C. §§ 571–584), federal agency programs (FMCS, EEOC, NLRB), and court-annexed ADR programs operated under the authority of the Civil Justice Reform Act.
- State-level frameworks — state ADR statutes, court rules, and mediator certification requirements organized by jurisdiction. The mediator certification requirements by state page provides the cross-jurisdictional comparison underlying these entries.
- Professional and standards bodies — national associations (American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution, Association for Conflict Resolution, International Mediation Institute) and the standards documents they publish.
- Practice-area programs — listings segmented by dispute context: family, employment, commercial, construction, healthcare, intellectual property, and others corresponding to named practice-area pages within this resource.
- Training and credentialing providers — institutions offering mediator training, continuing education, and certification pathways as described in the mediator training programs topical page.
Entries within each tier follow a consistent internal structure: program or entity name, governing authority or parent organization, geographic scope, and applicable regulatory citation where one exists.
What each listing covers
Each directory entry contains a defined set of data fields. The field set varies slightly between entity types but maintains four mandatory elements across all categories:
- Formal name — the legally registered or officially published name of the program, organization, statute, or credential, as it appears in the governing document or agency publication.
- Governing authority — the statute, rule, administrative code section, or organizational charter under which the listed entity operates. For federal programs, this is a U.S. Code or C.F.R. citation; for state programs, the applicable state statute number.
- Geographic jurisdiction — national, multi-state, single state, or court-district scope, enabling users to filter by the jurisdiction relevant to a given dispute.
- Process classification — mediation, arbitration, neutral evaluation, ombudsman, or hybrid, using the taxonomy established by the ADR landscape in the U.S. reference page.
Supplemental fields appear where applicable: mediator roster access points, fee schedule references (cross-linked to mediation cost and fees for context), confidentiality rule citations traceable to either the Uniform Mediation Act or Federal Rule of Evidence 408, and links to ethics frameworks such as those maintained by the FMCS under 29 C.F.R. Part 1400.
Entries for practice-area-specific programs include a dispute-context field that maps to the corresponding topical page — for example, an EEOC mediation program entry maps to the EEOC mediation program explanatory page, and an entry for a construction industry neutral panel maps to mediation in construction disputes. This field structure allows the listings to serve as a navigable cross-reference rather than a flat alphabetical index.
Explore This Site
References
- 11 U.S.C. § 362
- 29 U.S.C. § 172 — Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service Authority (via Cornell LII)
- 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.
- Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996 — 5 U.S.C. § 571 et seq. (Cornell LII)
- Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996 — 5 U.S.C. §§ 571–584 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
- Center for Restorative Justice & Peacemaking, University of Minnesota School of Social Work
- Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990, 28 U.S.C. § 471 — Legal Information Institute, Cornell
- Federal Rule of Evidence 501 — Privilege in General