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Michael E. Dickstein
Lecturer in Law

Biography 

   Michael E. Dickstein has taught negotiation, mediation, and Alternative Dispute Resolution at Stanford Law School since 2005, and has been a principal in Dickstein Dispute Resolution, helping resolve complex disputes across North America, since the mid-1990’s.
In addition to teaching at Stanford, Mr. Dickstein has taught introductory and advanced classes on mediation, negotiation and ADR worldwide (including in Canada, the United States, China, France, Germany, England, Ireland, Australia, Trinidad and Tobago, Bermuda, the Bahamas, and St. Lucia).  He has taught in conjunction with such institutions as the University of San Francisco (as an adjunct professor in the MBA program), Shantou University in China, and Boalt Hall Law School (U.C. Berkeley).  He has taught senior executives (including CEOs, CFOs, COO’s), board members, senior military officers, trial and appellate judges, legislators, consultants, managers, lawyers,  arbitrators, mediators, commissioners, barristers, solicitors, ombudspeople, salespeople, bankers, HR professionals, union leaders and members, deans, educators, teachers, academics, actors, engineers,  landscape architects, technicians, programmers, accountants, auditors, students (including J.D., MBA, PhD, engineering, undergraduate, and high school), secretaries, receptionists, elected officials, bureaucrats, dentists, lords, knights, and others.
In his dispute resolution practice, Mr. Dickstein has mediated and successfully settled cases on a wide variety of topics (including class action, commercial, employment, contract, intellectual property, franchise, real estate, personal injury, discrimination, malpractice, construction defect, and defamation issues).  Mr. Dickstein has mediated over 200 class actions across North America (including in New York, Toronto, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Nashville, Rochester, Minneapolis, Columbus, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento and Orange County), with class sizes ranging from fewer than 100 class members to over 70,000. These actions have included consumer, discrimination, wage, and employment issues, and ranged across industries including the retail, financial, technology, government, restaurant, transportation, medical, customer service, security, sales, academic, casino, and service industries.
Examples of Mr. Dickstein’s work include: mediating a discrimination class action, involving a university’s structuring of its sports program, and provision of facilities and opportunities for women; facilitating the contract negotiations between Canada’s theatre actors and major theatre owners; mediating a nationwide wage and hour class action brought against a major financial institution, with over 60,000 class members and hundreds of millions of dollars in dispute; mediating an international trademark dispute involving the wine labels of a leading American and a leading European wine producer;  mediating claims between one of the world’s leading automobile manufacturers and its franchisees; and arbitrating employment claims against a pre-eminent securities company. Mr. Dickstein has also presided over appeals of small claims actions and settlement conferences, as a judge pro tem for the San Francisco Superior Court, and small claims trials, for the San Francisco and Alameda Courts.Mr. Dickstein was formerly a partner in one of North America’s leading law firms (Heller, Ehrman), and earned his A.B. from Harvard College in 1981, and J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1985.  For more information on Mr. Dickstein, please see www.DicksteinDisputeResolution.com.l E. Dickstein has taught negotiation, mediation, and Alternative Dispute Resolution at Stanford Law School since 2005, and has been a principal in Dickstein Dispute Resolution, helping resolve complex disputes across North America, since the mid-1990’s.

In addition to teaching at Stanford, Mr. Dickstein has taught introductory and advanced classes on mediation, negotiation and ADR worldwide (including in Canada, the United States, China, France, Germany, England, Ireland, Australia, Trinidad and Tobago, Bermuda, the Bahamas, and St. Lucia).  He has taught in conjunction with such institutions as the University of San Francisco (as an adjunct professor in the MBA program), Shantou University in China, and Boalt Hall Law School (U.C. Berkeley).  He has taught senior executives (including CEOs, CFOs, COO’s), board members, senior military officers, trial and appellate judges, legislators, consultants, managers, lawyers,  arbitrators, mediators, commissioners, barristers, solicitors, ombudspeople, salespeople, bankers, HR professionals, union leaders and members, deans, educators, teachers, academics, actors, engineers,  landscape architects, technicians, programmers, accountants, auditors, students (including J.D., MBA, PhD, engineering, undergraduate, and high school), secretaries, receptionists, elected officials, bureaucrats, dentists, lords, knights, and others.In his dispute resolution practice, Mr. Dickstein has mediated and successfully settled cases on a wide variety of topics (including class action, commercial, employment, contract, intellectual property, franchise, real estate, personal injury, discrimination, malpractice, construction defect, and defamation issues).  Mr. Dickstein has mediated over 200 class actions across North America (including in New York, Toronto, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Nashville, Rochester, Minneapolis, Columbus, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento and Orange County), with class sizes ranging from fewer than 100 class members to over 70,000. These actions have included consumer, discrimination, wage, and employment issues, and ranged across industries including the retail, financial, technology, government, restaurant, transportation, medical, customer service, security, sales, academic, casino, and service industries.Examples of Mr. Dickstein’s work include: mediating a discrimination class action, involving a university’s structuring of its sports program, and provision of facilities and opportunities for women; facilitating the contract negotiations between Canada’s theatre actors and major theatre owners; mediating a nationwide wage and hour class action brought against a major financial institution, with over 60,000 class members and hundreds of millions of dollars in dispute; mediating an international trademark dispute involving the wine labels of a leading American and a leading European wine producer;  mediating claims between one of the world’s leading automobile manufacturers and its franchisees; and arbitrating employment claims against a pre-eminent securities company. Mr. Dickstein has also presided over appeals of small claims actions and settlement conferences, as a judge pro tem for the San Francisco Superior Court, and small claims trials, for the San Francisco and Alameda Courts.Mr. Dickstein was formerly a partner in one of North America’s leading law firms (Heller, Ehrman), and earned his A.B. from Harvard College in 1981, and J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1985.  For more information on Mr. Dickstein, please see www.DicksteinDisputeResolution.comMichael E. Dickstein has taught negotiation, mediation, and Alternative Dispute Resolution at Stanford Law School since 2005, and has been a principal in Dickstein Dispute Resolution, helping resolve complex disputes across North America, since the mid-199Examples of Mr. Dickstein’s work include: mediating a discrimination class action, involving a university’s structuring of its sports program, and provision of facilities and opportunities for women; facilitating the contract negotiations between Canada’s theatre actors and major theatre owners; mediating a nationwide wage and hour class action brought against a major financial institution, with over 60,000 class members and hundreds of millions of dollars in dispute; mediating an international trademark dispute involving the wine labels of a leading American and a leading European wine producer;  mediating claims between one of the world’s leading automobile manufacturers and its franchisees; and arbitrating employment claims against a pre-eminent securities company. Mr. Dickstein has also presided over appeals of small claims actions and settlement conferences, as a judge pro tem for the San Francisco Superior Court, and small claims trials, for the San Francisco and Alameda Courts.Mr. Dickstein was formerly a partner in one of North America’s leading law firms (Heller, Ehrman), and earned his A.B. from Harvard College in 1981, and J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1985.  For more information on Mr. Dickstein, please see www.DicksteinDisputeResolution.comMichael E. Dickstein has taught negotiation, mediation, and Alternative Dispute Resolution at Stanford Law School since 2005, and has been a principal in Dickstein Dispute Resolution, helping resolve complex disputes across North America, since the mid-1990’s.

In addition to teaching at Stanford, Mr. Dickstein has taught introductory and advanced classes on mediation, negotiation and ADR worldwide (including in Canada, the United States, China, France, Germany, England, Ireland, Australia, Trinidad and Tobago, Bermuda, the Bahamas, and St. Lucia).  He has taught in conjunction with such institutions as the University of San Francisco (as an adjunct professor in the MBA program), Shantou University in China, and Boalt Hall Law School (U.C. Berkeley).  He has taught senior executives (including CEOs, CFOs, COO’s), board members, senior military officers, trial and appellate judges, legislators, consultants, managers, lawyers,  arbitrators, mediators, commissioners, barristers, solicitors, ombudspeople, salespeople, bankers, HR professionals, union leaders and members, deans, educators, teachers, academics, actors, engineers,  landscape architects, technicians, programmers, accountants, auditors, students (including J.D., MBA, PhD, engineering, undergraduate, and high school), secretaries, receptionists, elected officials, bureaucrats, dentists, lords, knights, and others.

In his dispute resolution practice, Mr. Dickstein has mediated and successfully settled cases on a wide variety of topics (including class action, commercial, employment, contract, intellectual property, franchise, real estate, personal injury, discrimination, malpractice, construction defect, and defamation issues).  Mr. Dickstein has mediated over 200 class actions across North America (including in New York, Toronto, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Nashville, Rochester, Minneapolis, Columbus, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento and Orange County), with class sizes ranging from fewer than 100 class members to over 70,000. These actions have included consumer, discrimination, wage, and employment issues, and ranged across industries including the retail, financial, technology, government, restaurant, transportation, medical, customer service, security, sales, academic, casino, and service industries.

Examples of Mr. Dickstein’s work include: mediating a discrimination class action, involving a university’s structuring of its sports program, and provision of facilities and opportunities for women; facilitating the contract negotiations between Canada’s theatre actors and major theatre owners; mediating a nationwide wage and hour class action brought against a major financial institution, with over 60,000 class members and hundreds of millions of dollars in dispute; mediating an international trademark dispute involving the wine labels of a leading American and a leading European wine producer;  mediating claims between one of the world’s leading automobile manufacturers and its franchisees; and arbitrating employment claims against a pre-eminent securities company. 

Mr. Dickstein has also presided over appeals of small claims actions and settlement conferences, as a judge pro tem for the San Francisco Superior Court, and small claims trials, for the San Francisco and Alameda Courts.

Mr. Dickstein was formerly a partner in one of North America’s leading law firms (Heller, Ehrman), and earned his A.B. from Harvard College in 1981, and J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1985.  For more information on Mr. Dickstein, please see www.DicksteinDisputeResolution.com

Employment

  • Principal, Dickstein Dispute Resolution/ MEDiate, 1992—Present
  • Adjunct Professor, University of San Francisco (MBA), 2003—2004
  • Lecturer, UC Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall), 1990
  • Partner/Associate, Heller Ehrman et al., 1985—1992