TRIGUEIRO, M. C.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9460754257342826; TRIGUEIRO, Mirella Cardoso.
Resumo:
Adequate conflict resolution methods, namely, conciliation and mediation, have been
encouraged by the 2015 Civil Procedure Code and CNJ Resolution No. 125/2010, as
a policy to be implemented in the national Courts to contribute to the decrease in the
high rates of litigation. In view of the great litigation that exists in the country's
Judiciary, the work is justified by the great importance of encouraging the culture of
consensus. In this way, the programs carried out by the Paraíba Court of Justice and
the conciliation and mediation indexes carried out in 2019 through the CNJ Justice in
Numbers Report are investigated. From this, the effectiveness of selfcomposing
means in the analysis is analyzed. regarding the reduction of processes. In this case,
is it possible to affirm that the selfcomposing
means achieved positive results in the
TJPB? It can be said that it is not, because the statistics exposed in the Report
regarding the agreement indexes are low in relation to the number of new processes
that enter the TJPB. Through documentary research, it appears that the rates of
agreements made in the year of the survey show low rates, however the respective
Court has several projects and campaigns with the aim of encouraging the
jurisdictionals that the best alternative is to seek a friendly composition of their
conflicts. The present work has a descriptive and exploratory nature, since it seeks
both a review of the literature and the deepening of the theme, with reference to the
approach, the research is qualitative and the method uses the deductive, starting
from the general observation of the indices of agreements in the Brazilian justice in
relation to the Paraíba State Justice. Thus, it can be seen that, in a context of great
litigation, conciliation and mediation are alternatives to reduce the high levels of
litigation brought to the Judiciary and for that it is necessary to change the
educational, structural and cultural order both by society and the Judiciary.