Abogados de Collaborative Law
1306 abogados de Collaborative Law encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Law Offices of David Beaudry

Callahan Trial Lawyers

Law Offices of David Centeno

Law Offices of David Cole Phelps

Johnson Injury Lawyers

Crell Injury Lawyers

Crell Law Group

Thomas & Associates

Gotzh & Associates

Schachter & Associates

Ratcliff Law Office

Rubin & Associates

Lutz Law Group

Law Offices of David Lutz

Lederman Trial Lawyers

David Michael Knoll, Attorney at Law

Badanes & Associates
Collaborative Law Lawyers Across the United States
Collaborative law offers a way to resolve legal disputes without going to court. Both parties and their attorneys sign a participation agreement committing to negotiate in good faith. If negotiations fail, both lawyers must withdraw — giving everyone a strong incentive to reach a deal.
What Collaborative Law Covers
Collaborative law is used most often in family law matters like divorce, child custody, and property division. It also applies to business disputes, estate disagreements, and certain employment conflicts. The process brings both sides to the table with their attorneys and, when needed, neutral specialists like financial advisors or child psychologists.
Unlike mediation, each party has their own lawyer advocating for them throughout. Unlike litigation, the goal is a mutually acceptable agreement rather than a court-imposed decision. According to the International Academy of Collaborative Professionals, roughly 90% of collaborative cases reach settlement without ever entering a courtroom.
When to Hire a Collaborative Law Lawyer
- You and your spouse want a divorce but prefer to avoid a contentious court battle
- You need to resolve a child custody arrangement where both parents want input
- A business partnership is dissolving and both sides want to protect the company's value
- You're dealing with a property division dispute and want creative solutions a judge wouldn't typically order
- Preserving a working relationship with the other party matters to you long-term
How the Collaborative Process Works
The process begins when both parties sign a collaborative participation agreement. This contract binds everyone to transparency and good-faith negotiation. All financial records, assets, and relevant information must be disclosed voluntarily.
The parties then meet in a series of structured sessions — typically four to ten meetings over three to six months. Neutral specialists may join to address financial planning, tax implications, or children's needs. If either side walks away from the process, both attorneys are disqualified from representing their clients in any subsequent litigation.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Division of marital assets is negotiated directly, considering each spouse's contributions, earning capacity, and future needs
- Child support calculations follow state guidelines but can include agreed-upon adjustments for education, healthcare, and extracurricular costs
- Spousal support factors include the length of the marriage, each party's income, age, health, and standard of living during the marriage
- Retirement accounts, stock options, and business interests are valued by neutral financial specialists and divided by agreement
- Tax consequences of each proposed division are analyzed before any final agreement is signed
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if the collaborative process fails?
Both attorneys must withdraw from the case. You and the other party would each need to hire new lawyers to proceed with litigation. This built-in consequence keeps both sides motivated to negotiate seriously. The cost of starting over with new counsel acts as a powerful deterrent against bad-faith tactics.
Is collaborative law cheaper than traditional litigation?
In most cases, yes. The American Bar Association reports that collaborative divorces typically cost 30-50% less than litigated ones. The savings come from fewer court appearances, less adversarial motion practice, and shorter timelines. Most collaborative cases resolve within six months, while litigated divorces can drag on for a year or more.
