Dispute Resolution Reference Guide

This Reference Guide is designed to provide Justice counsel with practical information about Dispute Resolution (“DR”) processes and to allow counsel to remain current with developments in the rapidly evolving field of DR. It contains information directed at counsel with varying levels of familiarity with and practical experience in DR.

The term “Dispute Resolution” (“DR”) rather than “Alternative Dispute Resolution” (“ADR”), is used by the Project to reflect the philosophy that processes such as mediation, arbitration and mini-trial, together with litigation, form a broad spectrum of dispute resolution options. Non-litigious DR processes are therefore perceived as complements to litigation, rather than strictly as alternatives. Our particular focus is on non-litigious DR processes, as the Civil Litigation Branch is responsible for providing legal advice and representation in relation to litigated disputes.

Law Practice Management Division (LPMD) will continue to update and amend the Reference Guide. As new DR processes develop and become more widely used in Canada, individual practice modules in respect of those processes will be added to the Reference Guide.

At all times, DRS is available to provide further information and advice concerning any of the information contained in the Reference Guide. LPMD can be reached at LPMD-DGPD@justice.gc.ca.

Datasets available for download

Additional Info

Field Value
Last Updated October 22, 2024, 16:22 (UTC)
Created October 1, 2024, 07:55 (UTC)
Domain / Topic
Domain or topic of the dataset being cataloged.
Description
A description of the dataset.

This Reference Guide is designed to provide Justice counsel with practical information about Dispute Resolution (“DR”) processes and to allow counsel to remain current with developments in the rapidly evolving field of DR. It contains information directed at counsel with varying levels of familiarity with and practical experience in DR.

The term “Dispute Resolution” (“DR”) rather than “Alternative Dispute Resolution” (“ADR”), is used by the Project to reflect the philosophy that processes such as mediation, arbitration and mini-trial, together with litigation, form a broad spectrum of dispute resolution options. Non-litigious DR processes are therefore perceived as complements to litigation, rather than strictly as alternatives. Our particular focus is on non-litigious DR processes, as the Civil Litigation Branch is responsible for providing legal advice and representation in relation to litigated disputes.

Law Practice Management Division (LPMD) will continue to update and amend the Reference Guide. As new DR processes develop and become more widely used in Canada, individual practice modules in respect of those processes will be added to the Reference Guide.

At all times, DRS is available to provide further information and advice concerning any of the information contained in the Reference Guide. LPMD can be reached at LPMD-DGPD@justice.gc.ca.

Tags
Keywords/tags categorizing the dataset.
Format (CSV, XLS, TXT, PDF, etc)
File format of the dataset.
Dataset Size
Dataset size in megabytes.
Metadata Identifier
Metadata identifier – can be used as the unique identifier for catalogue entry
Published Date
Published date of the dataset.
1995-06-01
Time Period Data Span (start date)
Start date of the data in the dataset.
Time Period Data Span (end date)
End date of time data in the dataset.
GeoSpatial Area Data Span
A spatial region or named place the dataset covers.
Field Value
Access category
Type of access granted for the dataset (open, closed, service, etc).
License
License used to access the dataset.
Open Government Licence - Canada
Limits on use
Limits on use of data.
Location
Location of the dataset.
Data Service
Data service for accessing a dataset.
Owner
Owner of the dataset.
Department of Justice Canada | Ministère de la Justice Canada
Contact Point
Who to contact regarding access?
Contact Point Email
The email to contact regarding access?
Publisher
Publisher of the dataset.
Publisher Email
Email of the publisher.
OG-GO@justice.gc.ca
Accessed At
Date the data and metadata was accessed.
Field Value
Identifier
Unique identifier for the dataset.
Language
Language(s) of the dataset
Link to dataset description
A URL to an external document describing the dataset.
Persistent Identifier
Data is identified by a persistent identifier.
Globally Unique Identifier
Data is identified by a persistent and globally unique identifier.
Contains data about individuals
Does the data hold data about individuals?
Contains data about identifiable individuals
Does the data hold identifiable data about individual?
Contains Indigenous Data
Does the data hold data about Indigenous communities?
Field Value
Source
Source of the dataset.
https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/d2ba7791-0661-4d7a-902f-6ca1b23978f2
Version notes
Version notes about the dataset.
Is version of another dataset
Link to dataset that it is a version of.
Other versions
Link to datasets that are versions of it.
Provenance Text
Provenance Text of the data.
Provenance URL
Provenance URL of the data.
Temporal resolution
Describes how granular the date/time data in the dataset is.
GeoSpatial resolution in meters
Describes how granular (in meters) geospatial data is in the dataset.
GeoSpatial resolution (in regions)
Describes how granular (in regions) geospatial data is in the dataset.
Field Value
Indigenous Community Permission
Who holds the Indigenous Community Permission. Who to contact regarding access to a dataset that has data about Indigenous communities.
Community Permission
Community permission (who gave permission).
The Indigenous communities the dataset is about
Indigenous communities from which data is derived.
Field Value
Number of data rows
If tabular dataset, total number of rows.
Number of data columns
If tabular dataset, total number of unique columns.
Number of data cells
If tabular dataset, total number of cells with data.
Number of data relations
If RDF dataset, total number of triples.
Number of entities
If RDF dataset, total number of entities.
Number of data properties
If RDF dataset, total number of unique properties used by the triples.
Data quality
Describes the quality of the data in the dataset.
Metric for data quality
A metric used to measure the quality of the data, such as missing values or invalid formats.

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