The Institute of Arbitrators & Mediators Australia (IAMA) is the nation’s largest, independent and most experienced alternative dispute resolution (ADR) organisation. Founded in 1975, membership includes some of Australia’s eminent and experienced ADR professionals from a diverse range of sectors including commercial, legal, industry, education and government. With offices in all states and territories, it also plays a key role in industry and consumer schemes.
With offices in all states and territories, it also plays a key role in industry and consumer schemes. The IAMA provides services in all forms of ADR including arbitration, mediation, adjudication, conciliation, and expert determination, and is involved in the professional development, training and accreditation of ADR across Australia and internationally.
The Institute of Arbitrators & Mediators Australia has a panel of skilled and experienced dispute resolvers covering many commercial areas and professional disciplines. The specialist areas include construction and engineering, law, finance, accounting, information technology, health services, and local government and many others. Parties are able to select their dispute resolver from the Institute's panel of ADR professionals, or the Institute will nominate a suitable person on request. The Institute can also assist parties in designing or setting up an appropriate ADR procedure for particular applications. The Institute has available recommended rules and standard contract clauses for facilitating dispute resolution.
Download Request for Nomination of a Dispute Resolver (PDF 154kb)
With mediation being adopted widely across the commercial, legal, industry, education and government sectors, an understanding of the practical application of mediation techniques is an important and useful professional skill.
The Institute of Arbitrators & Mediators Australia (IAMA) has an established reputation as Australia’s pre-eminent provider of mediation training and as a Recognised Mediator Accreditation Body, its national mediation course complies with the new National Mediator Accreditation Standards (NMAS) as implemented by the Australian Attorney General’s National Alternative Dispute Resolution Advisory Council.
The Practitioner’s Certificate in Mediation presented by Nationally Accredited instructors and conducted
Australia-wide, offers a practice-oriented qualification in mediation.
Participants who successfully complete the assessment module may apply for National Accreditation through IAMA.
The National Accreditation Mediator System - Letter from IAMA President
Application for Experience Qualified Practitioners Application for Trainers
For course details download registration form and send to National Office.
The 2008 course dates are as follows. Access IAMA State & Territory Offices here
Melbourne 19 - 22 & 26 - 27 August and 11 - 14 & 18 - 19 November
Sydney 28-30 March & 5-6 April and 3 - 6 & 12 - 13 September
Brisbane 15 - 17 & 20 - 21 October
Adelaide 7 - 10 and 13 - 14 October
Canberra 18 - 21 November and 4 - 5 December
Perth 20 - 22 and 27 - 29 August
The power of mediation: The Hon Tony Fitzgerald AC QC launches IAMA Course handbook Read more (PDF)
Diary of The Practitioner's Certificate in Mediation: Martin Jones, Group Manager - Employee Relations Strategy, Fairfax Media Read more (PDF)
The New Australian National Mediator Standards
IAMA has taken a strongly supportive and active role throughout the development of an independent, voluntary scheme within which mediators can seek national accreditation under a set of new approval and practice standards. As their name suggests, the new National Mediator Standards have national application and became effective on 1 January 2008. The effectiveness of the National Mediator Accreditation Scheme (NMAS) will depend on the participation of agencies that carry the status of being a Recognised Mediator Accreditation Body (RMAB). Read more.
Arbitration has had a long history in Australia as a preferred method for resolving commercial disputes. When IAMA was founded in 1975 as the Institute of Arbitrators Australia, it was at the forefront of the development, training and practice of arbitration. The Professional Certificate in Arbitration is a joint venture between the Institute of Arbitrators & Mediators Australia and the University of Adelaide. This national course is an Australian first and has suitably qualified students who have become successful graded arbitrators in their fields of professional expertise since its commencement in 1998. In 2004 the course was nominated in the B-HERT (Business/Higher Education Round Table) Awards, an Australian Government/AusIndustry initiative which recognises Outstanding Achievements in Collaboration in Research & Development and Education & Training.
Offered as an online course it attracts a tertiary qualification upon successful completion. Face to face classes are held in Australian capital cities where there is sufficient student demand.. Download the course information document (Acrobat format, PDF 361K) and visit the course website for more information
National arbitration course to meet market need - The Adelaidean, 30 March 1998 (PDF)
Informa plc, the leading provider of specialist information to the global academic & scientific, professional and commercial communities has published The Arbitration Law Handbook. Editors Ben Horn and Roger Hopkins have collected together for the first time in one volume the laws in force in more than 20 countries, including Australia, and the main procedural rules used in each of those countries, including the IAMA Fast Track Arbitration Rules. An indispensable reference book for practitioners and students, it is available to members at a special discount. To place your order, click here.
This issue has a broad scope. We consdier arbitration in some articles, mediation in others, adjudication in one; and we also consider dispute resolution generally. Nor is the scope confined only to Australia. Several of the articles consdier the international context of the discussion, or reacquaint us with international conventions, or compare and contrast the position in Australia with the position in another jurisdiction. - Russell Thirgood, Editor
" ... You may have read the article on arbitration by Marcus Priest in The Australian Financial Review (13 October 2006) in which he referred to the measures that IAMA was proposing to adopt. To promote the credentials of arbitration as a truly effective means of determinative alternative dispute resolution after facilitated procedures have failed to resolve disputes, we need to take every opportunity to publicise our efforts to the community at large ..." - Laurie James, IAMA President