The Long Game: Why the History of ADR is the Key to Your Future Litigation Strategy

Written by

in

Ken Strongman, Esq
Ken Strongman, Esq.

Over the last few weeks, we’ve journeyed from the harmony-oriented teachings of Ancient China to the high-pressure dockets of 1970s America. The conclusion is inescapable: Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) is not a new legal experiment. It is a fundamental pillar of civilization stability.

For the modern litigator, understanding this history isn’t just an academic exercise—it’s a strategic advantage.

  1. ADR is the Historical Default

From the Pope’s arbitration of the “New World” to the chukai-sha in Japan, societies have always known that trial is a blunt instrument. When you suggest mediation, you are following a 2,000-year-old blueprint for successful resolution.

  1. The Mandate is Systematic

The modern ADR framework didn’t happen by accident. It was a deliberate pivot in 1976 to save the civil justice system from the “Four Horsemen”: cost, delay, access, and overcrowding. ADR is the fulfillment of the federal mandate for a “just, speedy, and inexpensive” resolution.

  1. Resolution is a Survival Strategy

From Colonial Puritans to modern trade associations, the most successful market participants prioritize commercial comity over total legal war. They know that a “business-like compromise” protects the bottom line better than a pyrrhic victory in court.

The takeaway for litigators? ADR is where history meets the future. If you want to move your cases forward using a process that is both historically grounded and commercially sophisticated, I can help. I bring a deep understanding of both the litigation lifecycle and the business-focused needs of your clients to every mediation.

I am available for complex commercial mediation and arbitration. Let’s connect to discuss how I can help your clients find the relief history has always promised.

🔗 Read the full historical series here: 

Ancient ADR Roots: ADR is Older Than Your Law School

1976: How the “Four Horsemen” of Litigation Birthed Modern ADR

Survival of the Fittest: Choose Resolution Over War

These blogs are adapted from my unpublished manuscript on Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR).

About the Author: Ken Strongman is a private commercial mediator/arbitrator of complex, high risk litigated cases since 2004. Disputes addressed include business, securities, construction defects, real estate, intellectual property, employment, environment, energy, and trusts & estates. He is also a Mediator and Arbitrator for FINRA, past president of The Mediation Society. and instructor at UC Law San Francisco.

© 2026 Ken Strongman. All Rights Reserved. Please do not copy or re-post without permission.

#LegalHistory #LitigationStrategy #CommercialMediation #ADR #LegalInnovation