Joseph Stulberg is a Professor Emeritus at The Ohio State University – Moritz College of Law, and currently serves as Co-Director of the Divided Community Project. Professor Stulberg, an Emeritus Michael E. Moritz Chair in Alternative Dispute Resolution, teaches courses primarily in alternative dispute resolution, including Legal Negotiation and the Multiparty Practicum. He earned his J.D. from New York University School of Law and his Ph.D. in moral philosophy from the University of Rochester. He is the 2019 recipient of both the American Bar Association’s Award for Outstanding Scholarly Work (Section of Dispute Resolution) and the Association of Conflict Resolution’s Mary Parker Follett Award for significant contributions to the field.
A former vice president of the American Arbitration Association in charge of its Community Dispute Services program, Professor Stulberg has been active in the ADR field as a practitioner, scholar, and teacher since 1973.
An experienced practitioner, he has mediated disputes of national significance involving Native American land claims, environmental controversies, and state budget negotiations; he has facilitated significant public planning processes among governmental leaders, NGOs, unions, and citizen groups in emerging democratic societies in Central and Eastern Europe.
Regarded as one of the nation’s pre-eminent mediator trainers, and the only individual to participate in conducting mediator training for the U.S. Attorney General’s Neighborhood Justice Center programs in Atlanta, Kansas City, and Los Angeles, Professor Stulberg has trained more than 9,500 people in 45 states to serve in court, agency-based, or community-based dispute resolution programs. He developed and conducted the prototype 40-hour mediator training programs for the supreme courts of Florida and Michigan; designed and implemented the first peer-mediation program in New York City public schools; teamed with Partners for Democratic Change to deliver dispute resolution training to governmental and NGO leaders in Central and Eastern Europe; and, together with his longtime professional collaborator, Professor Lela P. Love, has taught courses on mediation theory and practice at multiple U.S. law schools and for university students in Western, Central, and Eastern Europe.
Professor Stulberg has published more than 60 articles in professional journals on theoretical, policy, and practice issues in dispute resolution, and has authored his book on mediation strategy and theory, The Middle Voice (3d ed. 2019.) (with Lela P. Love) as well as his co-authored law school textbook, Mediation Theory and Practice (3d ed. 2013).
Active in professional organizations, he was co-chair of the editorial board of the ABA’s Dispute Resolution Magazine, the quarterly publication of its 4,500-member Dispute Resolution Section, from 2012-2017. In the Dialogue Through Conflict Foundation, he will serve as a Scientific Advisor.