Human And Artificial Intelligence Camaraderie In Mediation: A Path Towards Development
- IJLLR Journal
- Jul 14
- 2 min read
Ms. Vani Sharma, Doctoral Research Scholar at National Law Institute University, Bhopal
Dr. Padma Singh, Assistant Professor (Senior) at National Law Institute University, Bhopal
Ms. Aditi Vyas, Doctoral Research Scholar at National Law Institute University, Bhopal
ABSTRACT
The escalating confluence of artificial intelligence (AI) and dispute resolution presents a worth pondering over yet often contentious landscape. This academic article explores the transformative potential of human and AI’s analytical prowess can forge the efficient and empathetic pathway to conflict resolution and analyse whether this camaraderie in mediation promotes effectiveness, equity, and accessibility or instead creates moral, legal, and systemic weaknesses. This study provides a thorough examination of the revolutionary role to find out whether we go beyond simple ideas of AI as a tool and look at the subtleties of AI as a collaborative partner with the process of Mediation in the comparative analysis of different countries. AI can improve the effectiveness of mediators by using data-driven insights, predictive analytics, and procedural automation, all while keeping the important human qualities of empathy, emotional intelligence, and nuanced negotiation. Using recent advances in natural language processing and machine learning, this article looks at how AI can help human mediators instead of replacing them in tasks like figuring out what people really want, figuring out how likely a settlement is, and writing complex agreements. We will look at how the legal and moral frameworks for using AI in dispute resolution are changing in different places. We will focus on proactive policy ideas and legislative changes that are meant to make the most of AI's benefits while protecting the rights of participants and the integrity of the mediation and the human emotions and intelligence.
