How is Mediation Integrated into the Dispute Resolution System of Civil Cases in Hungary?
Viktória Harsági
Pázmány Péter Catholic University , HungaryAbstract
The article deals with the integration of mediation into the Hungarian justice system, with particular attention to its historical aspects, the connection between litigation and mediation and the conditions for becoming a mediator, as well as the two types of mediation.
Keywords:
mediation, Hungary, alternative dispute resolution, civil justiceReferences
Decastello, Alice. Mediáció az egészségügyben. Budapest: HVG Orac, 2010.
Decastello, Alice. “Mediation in Health.” Hungarian Medical Journal 2, no. 2 (2008): 193–199. (Crossref)
Gyekiczky, Tamás. “A mediációs irányelv.” Európai Jog 9, no. 6 (2009): 24–31.
Kengyel, Miklós, Viktória Harsági, and Zoltán Nemessányi. “Hungary.” In Civil and Commercial Mediation in Europe. National Mediation Rules and Procedures, vol. 1, edited by Carlos Esplugues, José Luis Iglesias, and Guillermo Palao, 217–238. Cambridge: Intersentia, 2013.
Kengyel, Miklós. Magyar polgári eljárásjog (Hungarian Civil Procedure), 11th ed. Budapest: Osiris, 2012.
Lovas, Zsuzsa, and Mária Herczog. A mediáció, avagy a fájdalommentes konfliktuskezelés. Budapest: Wolters Kluwer, 2019. (Crossref)
Nagy, Beáta, Kitti Kutrovátz, Gábor Király, and Márton Rakovics. “Parental mediation in the age of mobile technology.” Children & Society 37, no. 2 (2023): 424–451. (Crossref)
Nagy, Márta. Bírósági mediáció. Szeged: Bába Kiadó, 2011.