#ThePrivateCaucus: Conversations in Confidence Interview Series: Adi Gavrilă, CEO, ADR Center Romania; Senior Expert, ADR Center

Interviews

#ThePrivateCaucus:Conversations in Confidence Interview Series:
Adi Gavrilă, CEO, ADR Center Romania; Senior Expert, ADR Center

In this #ThePrivateCaucus: Conversations in Confidence interview, we feature Constantin-Adi Gavrilă, Mediator, Founder and CEO of ADR Center Romania, former Co-Chair of the International Mediation Institute’s Independent Standards Commission, and recipient of the Association for Conflict Resolution’s 2009 International Outstanding Leadership Award.

Since 2002, Adi has built extensive experience in resolving complex domestic and international disputes. Individuals, companies, and legal counsel alike trust him to design and manage mediations spanning family, labour, civil, and commercial matters.

Beyond the mediation table, Adi is also frequently called upon to facilitate complex, multi-party dialogue processes. He works with communities, governments, and international financial institutions, particularly on issues involving the social and environmental impact of large-scale projects, helping to bridge diverse stakeholder interests.

As a key member of the Organising Committee behind the Maxwell Challenge, Adi brings a strong practitioner’s perspective to the competition. In this interview, he shares how he balances the structured SOLVE framework with a more organic, empathetic approach to achieving outcomes that are not only effective, but sustainable.

Read the full interview below:

Q: How does your approach to mediation shape the way you achieve effective and sustainable resolutions?

Although the mediation process is based on key foundational principles and a clear structure – SOLVE, as we call it at ADR Center – I engage the parties in an organic manner. Hence, I always find it useful to make time to listen empathically to people’s stories. This helps me understand substantive, emotional and procedural needs, it gives me some clarity. Sustainable resolutions emerge when people feel heard, respected, and empowered to make their own decisions.

Q: From your perspective, what are some of the key considerations the Committee keeps in mind when designing the competition?

My belief if that the Committee aims to design a fair, inspiring, and realistic experience, yet an original one that has its own identity. We focus on showcasing cultural diversity, encouraging teamwork, and aligning the competition with real-world mediation standards and ethics. For example, the competition combines online with in person engagements to establish a realistic hybrid environment and approach to the mediation process.

Q: What key professional skills does the Maxwell Challenge aim to cultivate, and why are they essential for effective dispute resolution?

The Challenge promotes active listening, collaborative problem-solving, and adaptability – skills that turn theoretical understanding into practical competence. These abilities are at the heart of every successful mediator’s toolkit. To this end, I hope that, by the end of the competition, students will develop more emotional intelligence, curiosity and creativity.

Q: Other Insights

Even though this is a competition, I see it first as a safe space for learning, where there are no winners or losers. It is perfectly acceptable to be vulnerable, to try, to make mistakes, and to ask questions. Everyone involved should feel respected, valued, and important – because each participant represents the future of the dispute resolution field. After all, we should walk the talk and promote collaboration!

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Maxwell Unplugged: Erika Williams

Episode Overview
Join the conversation as Erika Williams, Independent arbitrator, joined by Monica Chong, a disputes lawyer at Wong Partnership LLP in Singapore, shares her journey of navigating a variety of roles before unexpectedly discovering her passion for arbitration – a reminder that opportunities can arise in the most unexpected places.
 
She shares insights from her experience in arbitration practice, as well as the value of both formal and informal connections while networking, and maybe even shares a few secrets on how to build them!

Cassandra Anthonisz

Deputy Manager of Legal & Business Service

Cassandra Gayle Anthonisz is the Deputy Manager of Legal and Business Services at Maxwell Chambers. Her multifaceted experience spans across legal, business development, and communications sectors, offering a distinctive combination of legal acumen, strategic insight, and cross-sector versatility.

Her professional background encompasses legal affairs, compliance, business development, and legal technology. She has held in-house positions across sectors, where she gained extensive experience navigating complex legal and regulatory environments. Her experience spans the implementation of strategic legal frameworks in sectors such as maritime, commodities, and fintech, with a focus on client-facing legal operations; contractual negotiations; contentious and non-contentious work.

Prior to joining Maxwell Chambers, Cassandra led legal technology start-ups through the unprecedented challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic. In these capacities, she integrated legal innovation with corporate strategy, while spearheading business development initiatives and cross-border legal solutions.

Cassandra has a passion for advancing access to justice and to promoting forward-thinking and progressive business-aligned legal practices. She holds a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) from Birmingham City University in the United Kingdom, and is currently pursuing a Master of Laws (LLM).

Ban Jiun Ean

CHIEF EXECUTIVE

Ban Jiun Ean read law at the National University of Singapore before joining the Ministry of Law. He spent nine years doing legal policy work, with a focus on the development of Singapore’s alternative dispute resolution (ADR) industry. 

Jiun Ean spearheaded the development of the world’s first integrated dispute resolution centre, Maxwell Chambers, which brought together arbitral institutions, service providers and legal practitioners under the same roof in a facility equipped with bespoke dispute resolution rooms and state-of-the-art supporting technology. In 2010, he was appointed Chief Executive of Maxwell Chambers, helming the company for five years and establishing it as the foremost dispute resolution centre of its kind in the world. In 2016, he left Maxwell to pursue several other projects, including the development of an arts centre and to write several novels. In 2019, Jiun Ean was appointed as the Executive Director of Singapore Mediation Centre (SMC), working to strengthen the mediation industry in Singapore and globally. 

Jiun Ean returns to Maxwell Chambers as Chief Executive, to augment the team as it continues to build on Maxwell’s position as the premier ADR facility in the world.

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