What is collaborative law?
Collaborative law is an alternate approach to the divorce process that protects you, your family and your future by focusing on your long-term, big-picture goals rather than immediate gratification or fear reduction. In the collaborative process your needs and concerns are first fully understood and your collaborative attorney assists in ensuring that they are given full attention and consideration. But rather than present them to a judge, they are put on the table in a collaborative session attended by you and your collaborative attorney, your spouse and his/her collaborative attorney and your coach, a mental health professional. Collectively, these individuals are known as the collaborative team. Likewise, it is important to understand your spouse’s needs and concerns, which will also be given fair and full attention in the process. Often there are creative compromises that you haven’t considered but, because your team has assisted hundreds of couples in divorcing well, they can offer new ideas, which feel satisfactory to both you and your spouse.
Other hallmarks of this process include a full commitment by all to developing an agreement acceptable to both spouses. Thus, we commit to full disclosure of all relevant information. Further, the collaborative lawyers are retained solely to assist in crafting settlement terms, not to represent you in court. That’s experienced by most people as a relief—no need to worry about your spouse’s lawyer ever cross-examining you in court! Rather, we all roll up our sleeves, commit to not going to court, and focus entirely on a settlement that meets your needs and the needs of your family as you construct a positive, peaceful, cooperative post-divorce life.
What is the collaborative team?
The collaborative team is a group of professionals who have completed collaborative divorce training and who are committed to reaching agreement with fairness and dignity. The team includes: attorneys for each of the spouses, a mental health professional who is a neutral and serves as the coach and chairperson of the team meetings, and, if necessary, a child specialist, who is also a neutral and a mental health professional, and a financial specialist, both of whom are trained in the collaborative process.
Every team is comprised of two attorneys and at least one coach, who are supporting you in every team meeting. The attorneys are there to advise and guide you and your spouse through the legal divorce and to assist in crafting an agreement that is enforceable under the law. The coach is always a member of the team and assists you and your spouse in processing the emotional divorce, which—in our experience—always accompanies the legal divorce. The coach is skilled at effective recognition and processing of the strong emotions present for most people in the middle of the breakup of their marriage. Use of a coach helps prevent emotions from hijacking the team meetings and allows for a more efficient, less stressful process.
If you have young children, you may also want to consider adding a child specialist, who is a neutral and a mental health professional. The child specialist meets first with the parents and then meets with the children to gain insight into their needs as they adjust to their parents’ divorce. The child specialist then meets again with the parents and the team to talk about options for addressing the children’s needs through the parenting time schedule and communication protocols. The child specialist can help craft an arrangement that will fit each spouse’s schedule as well as the children’s based on a more complete understanding of the children’s needs.
Can my therapist act as my coach? Or, can my child’s therapist act as the child specialist?
The same goes, to a lesser degree perhaps, for the child therapist who, based upon a prior relationship with one or both spouses, may be seen as favoring one spouse over the other—whether true or not—to such an extent that the legitimacy of the process might be impacted. This is regardless of whether s/he has completed the collaborative divorce training, which all team members must do. A child specialist, however, if given permission by you and your spouse, may speak with your child’s therapist if everyone agrees such input would be beneficial to a resolution.
Will my children be involved in the process, and if so, to what extent?
How do I choose a collaborative professional?
Will my collaborative professional fight for me?
However, during the divorce process, the collaboratively-trained divorce coach or child specialist fulfills a more neutral/non-aligned role: resolving conflict in a way that is least damaging to the participants. If a therapist tries to juggle multiple roles effectiveness is impaired-both for the therapist and for the collaborative team.
Will my children be involved in the process, and if so, to what extent?
How long does a collaborative divorce take from beginning to end?
What happens if a settlement cannot be reached?
Is a collaborative divorce less expensive than a litigated divorce?
Nonetheless, a collaborative divorce is generally less expensive than a litigated divorce that goes to trial. In litigation, retaining experts is often a necessary expense, but one tacked on at the end after the parties have already spent thousands of dollars in fees and expenses and are emotionally drained after months of arguing. Even compared to a litigated divorce that settles before trial, the collaborative divorce in which spouses are cooperating—openly exchanging financial information, voluntarily sharing legal documents with the team, and honestly discussing their needs and interests in meetings—is usually still more efficient and less expensive than traditional litigation. However, this is not a certainty.
The gentler, more transparent, collaborative approach is an investment in the family that can pay high dividends in the long run, even in those cases where the short term cost appears to be greater than the cost of some litigated divorces. The emotional toll of divorce cannot be overstated, and oftentimes the failure to address the emotional aspects of a divorce can “hijack” what might otherwise appear at the beginning of a divorce to be a fairly simple process. This is why the neutral coach is so valuable to the collaborative process. The collaborative model also preserves the integrity of the family as it enters its new phase after the divorce. Collaborative leaves you and your spouse more empowered to overcome future challenges and disagreements on your own rather than having to revert back to messy, costly post-divorce litigation. So long as you and your spouse remain joined—most often as co-parents, but occasionally through shared property settlements—there always exists the possibility of future arguments and, therefore, future litigation. This is often where the investment in collaborative pays off.
How does collaborative divorce differ from mediation?
In the collaborative process, while each professional is committed to resolution, you have your own lawyer beside you who is dedicated to giving you sound legal advice while simultaneously seeking agreement. In addition, the team meetings will be facilitated by mental health professionals who can coach you and your spouse in communication skills and anger management; the child therapist can assist you in relating to your children during the crisis of divorce and in developing emotionally healthy parenting plans; and a financial advisor can help you craft agreements that can maximize wealth while preserving the parties’ interests. The combination of all these experts working together is a power punch of knowledge that exceeds what mediation can offer.
Finally, the goal of collaborative law is not merely to dissolve your marriage in a legal way, which is essentially what mediation can provide. That certainly is a benefit. However, the collaborative model has the potential of providing you, your spouse, and your children with a better future, based on the development of conflict resolution skills, the delivery of applied knowledge for the formation of comprehensive agreements, and the support of trained professionals, as you strive to incorporate those skills and that knowledge in one of the most difficult transitions in your life. While many experience divorce as loss, the collaborative approach offers the possibility for growth, which is a feat rarely achieved by mediation, let alone litigation.
Is the collaborative process right for me?
If you would prefer to divorce with dignity, avoid a contentious courtroom battle and honor the love you once held for your each other, collaborative divorce offers a much better possibility of obtaining that result than does traditional divorce litigation. If you want to have a family that still feels like a family, with children knowing that both parents cared enough about them to engage in a divorce process that maintained civility and respect for all of the members, then again, collaborative divorce is probably right for you.
Can we collaborate if we aren't getting along?
If you are the only one committed to improving your ability to get along and the other isn’t there yet, you can gain tools and skills for dealing more effectively with your spouse. The end result is often that s/he joins you in wanting less stressful interactions. One thing is for sure: the litigation process never improves these relationships.