What is collaborative practice?
Collaborative practice is a way of resolving legal disputes outside of court. Rather than fighting over an outcome imposed by a judge, the people involved, supported by specially trained professionals, work together to reach an agreement that reflects what actually matters to them.
How does it work?
At the start of a collaborative process, everyone signs a Participation Agreement committing to honest disclosure, respectful communication, and staying out of court. Each party has their own collaboratively trained lawyer, and a team of other professionals – financial advisers, coaches, and sometimes child consultants – support the process from a neutral position.
The dispute is worked through in a series of face-to-face meetings where all parties and their professional team are present. Issues are discussed openly, different options are explored, and a customised agreement is reached that can then be made into a legally binding order.
What makes it different?
At the start of a collaborative process, everyone signs a Participation Agreement committing to honest disclosure, respectful communication, and staying out of court. Each party has their own collaboratively trained lawyer, and a team of other professionals – financial advisers, coaches, and sometimes child consultants – support the process from a neutral position.
The dispute is worked through in a series of face-to-face meetings where all parties and their professional team are present. Issues are discussed openly, different options are explored, and a customised agreement is reached that can then be made into a legally binding order.
| Collaborative practice | Court litigation | |
|---|---|---|
| Who decides the outcome? | The parties themselves | A judge |
| How long does it take? | Usually weeks to months | Can take years |
| Is it private? | Yes. Confidential | No. Public record |
| Can relationships be preserved? | Yes. Designed to prioritise relationships | Often damaged |
| Who is supported throughout? | All parties, by a professional team | Each party by their own lawyer only |
A brief note on mediation
Mediation also keeps disputes out of court, but in mediation a single neutral mediator works with the parties and there is generally no sharing of legal advice during sessions. In collaborative practice, each party has their own lawyer present at all times, plus additional specialist support from a financial and/or communication professional. The team approach tends to produce more durable outcomes. Mediations usually take place only over the course of one day, which parties usually communicating in the lead up to the mediation in written correspondence through their lawyers, which can often become heated and inflammatory. In collaborative practice, the team works together from the beginning of the process until the end.
What kinds of disputes is it suitable for?
- Family law: separation, property settlement, parenting arrangements, de facto relationship endings, prenuptial agreements
- Wills and estates: disputes after the passing of a family member or loved one, estate planning, family estate conversations
- Commercial law: partnership and director disputes, employment disputes, business relationship breakdowns
For more detail, see our pages on each of these areas:
On this page
- How does it work
- What makes it different
- A brief note on mediation
- What kinds of disputes is it suitable for?
Ready to take the first step on the collaborative journey?
Family law
Wills & estates
Commercial law
Australian Association of Collaborative Professionals
For a deeper explanation of collaborative practice including detailed process information and FAQs, visit the AACP national website at collaborativeaustralia.com.au: