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LOUISE PHIPPS SENFT
Louise Phipps Senft, voted “Baltimore’s Best” Mediator by Baltimore Magazine 2002 and named one of “Maryland’s Top 100 Women” for the year 2004 and 2007 by The Daily Record, founded the Baltimore Mediation Center in 1993, the first mediation firm in Maryland with a focus on relational approaches to conflict resolution. In 2006, BMC was expanded and renamed Louise Phipps Senft and Associates/Baltimore Mediation. In 2007, Louise was honored with one of the Baltimore Business Journal’s “Most Enterprising Woman” awards for 2007. The firm offers mediation, facilitation for collaborative decision-making for businesses and those in litigation, and negotiation and conflict resolution training, all from the transformative framework. Ms. Senft is known nationally for her elicitive design and delivery of conflict resolution and transformation skills training and mediation for professionals, court systems, companies, contractors, real estate management firms, hospitals, assisted living facilities, higher education and government agencies. Ms. Senft, also a law professor, has provided mediation and facilitation services to thousands of individuals in employment, business, closely held family businesses, trusts and estates and civil litigation. She writes a monthly column for The Daily Record, The Negotiating Table: Turning Problems into Opportunities. Ms. Senft’s work with family businesses is featured in the documentary, Resolutionary People (2002), produced by Emmy award winner Richard Chisolm. Ms. Senft’s work with corporate and public policy multiparty facilitation is featured in the book the Promise of Mediation (Jossey-Bass, 2004). Ms. Senft’s work in elder care mediation was the featured story on ABC Worldnews with Charles Gibson in July 27, 2007. She is an early member of the Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation, her firm was the pilot training program for teaching transformative theory with practical application, and she has been a national leader for transformative mediation for separation and divorce and for business conflicts. She is one of the originators of “marital mediation” for couples in conflict wishing to preserve their marriages while making difficult decisions, and for “team mediation” for business executives and managers wishing to maintain productivity while working through difficult personality and other differences. Ms. Senft has pioneered the value of self-awareness training and practices for conflict interveners teaching for Harvard Law School’s Program on Negotiation Insight Initiative for attorneys, CEO’s, professionals and executives worldwide as well as for Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, MBA Biotechnology Program and the Business of Medicine Program. Ms. Senft, an attorney, has over twenty years of mediation training and experience. In the business, organizational and litigation environment, specific background includes relational and interest-based negotiation and bargaining, discrimination and ADA issues, Medicare and medical disclosure concerns, medical malpractice, bankruptcy, business partnerships, alliance formations, succession planning, organizational visioning, condominium and real estate development, construction and real property contracting, public dialogue, regulatory disputes, public policy process, environmental policy and regulation, city planning, Board of Directors management, systems approaches, congregational conflicts and business/workplace mediation including interdepartmental issues and discrimination complaints. She also has a background in insurance and complex commercial litigation and professional malpractice matters. In addition to mediating many hundreds of business and litigated disputes, she is called upon regularly to facilitate quality conversations and meaningful dialogue for various executives, managers, and boards of directors. She has provided keynote speeches throughout the US and Canada. In the international arena, she is one of the founding members of Mediators Beyond Borders™, a non-profit offering conflict resolution aid and training for initiatives such as the Child Soldier Project in Ghana and the Katrina Mediation Project where she serves as Executive Chair of Training. Ms. Senft also has extensive experience in the family environment. Specifically, her background includes domestic mediation, separation and divorce, marital property and tax liability, domestic violence, high conflict, gay and lesbian issues, bankruptcy, religious annulment, parental rights, grandparents’ rights, adoption, cognitive, psychological and social child development, parenting plans, religious faith and doctrine on marriage, adultery, adult grief and traumatic incident, guardianship, estates and trusts, real estate and personal property asset division, estate planning, end of life issues, elder care decision-making, and closely held family business and partnership disputes. She has been the chosen mediator for over 2500 marital, separation or divorce mediations. Ms. Senft has been an adjunct Law Professor at the University of Maryland School of Law since 1998 teaching various courses in Alternative Methods of Dispute Resolution (ADR) for Lawyers, Negotiation and Mediation Theory and Practice. She designed and continues to teach what was the first certificated mediation training course offered by a Maryland law school. As a member of the faculty of the Harvard Law School’s Program on Negotiation Insight Initiative, she teaches conflict transformation theory, personal reactivity and self-awareness practices. Ms. Senft is a certified Enneagram teacher in the Narrative Tradition and associated with the Trifold School for Enneagram Studies and the International Association of Enneagram Teachers in the Narrative Tradition. She offers Enneagram workshops on greater productivity and personal satisfaction, emotional intelligence and self-awareness for judges, lawyers, businesses executives, managers and families. She has pioneered the reliance on self-awareness and the Enneagram for the conflict resolution and mediation communities as a means of quality practice and personal excellence. Ms. Senft is an elected Associate of the Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and is a nationally Certified Transformative Mediator™, and she has been certified as well by the Maryland Council on Dispute Resolution, both of which are the only two performance-based certifications of skill level in the US. She is the architect for Maryland’s Performance Based Assessment for Transformative Mediators which is part of the statewide Maryland Mediator Excellence Program, the first in the country. Ms. Senft and Baltimore Mediation are perhaps best known nationally for their trainings on conflict transformation and their offerings of certificated training courses in General and Advanced Mediation and Conflict Resolution and Domestic and Workplace Mediation with a focus on the transformative approach. Her training courses, with an emphasis on mediator self-awareness, fostering quality interaction, empowerment, informed decision-making by the parties, and recognition, were selected as a model and pilot for the training component of the national Transformative Mediation Project, an outgrowth of the highly acclaimed writing of R. B. Bush and J. Folger in their book The Promise of Mediation, Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1995 and have been the trainings of choice for the Maryland Judiciary and the American Bar Association. She tailors these trainings for three audiences: (1) professionals, including attorneys, doctors, therapists, religious, businessmen and women, human resources managers and educators; (2) families, youth and parents; and (3) those working in courts and agencies and non-profits. She also designed and offers the Practitioner’s Institute for advanced mediators. She has been interviewed by NPR and a guest on NPR radio affiliates and other radio programs and is the author of numerous training manuals, published by Baltimore Mediation, as well as articles including
She is co-author of the final chapter of the ADR Handbook for Judges, ed. D. Stienstra & S. Yates, American Bar Association and Federal Judicial Center (2004), has her work of facilitating public policy conflicts featured in Chapter 3 “Gaining Sight of the Goal of Transformation,” of the revised Promise of Mediation, 2d. ed., B. Bush & J. Folger, Jossey-Bass Publishers (2004) and is co-author of the chapter “Marital Mediation: Transforming Marital Conflict through Facilitated Dialogue-Reclaiming Personal Strength and Marital Connectedness”, with N.G. Sider in The Handbook of Transformative Practice: Relational Approaches to Conflict Intervention, ed. D. Della Noce and J. Folger (tbp 2008). Ms. Senft has earned the status of Advanced Practitioner as a Member of the international Association of Conflict Resolution’s Family Section, formerly the Academy of Family Mediators, and has served on their Ethics Committee and Mediation Training Approval Committee for many years. She served as Co-Chair of the Baltimore City Bar Association’s first ADR Committee, and she was elected and served on the Maryland State Bar Association’s ADR Section Council. In 1998, she was appointed by Chief Judge Bell to the Maryland Court of Appeals’ ADR Commission and the task force on Professional Responsibility in ADR. In 2000, Ms. Senft was appointed by the highest court to Chair the first statewide Family ADR Initiative. She is the co-architect of the state’s mediator grievance process and was subsequently appointed as Chair in 2003 of the Mediator Ombudsman Program for the Maryland Mediation and Conflict Resolution Office. She is a past President of the Maryland Council for Dispute Resolution. She is also an elected member and executive officer of Network 2000 whose mission is to place women on corporate boards and mentor rising female executives. She was selected as part of the first national certified mediation training team for the United States Postal Service REDRESS Program for EEO/discrimination complaints and other workplace disputes. From 1998 through 2001, she trained mediators across the country as part of the USPS national rollout, which trained over 2500 outside neutrals from 32 states, as well as over 18,000 labor and management representatives. She was selected by the American Arbitration Association to be part of a pilot mediation program for complex personal injury and insurance claims. And she has been selected for many federal mediation rosters including the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Transportation and Safety Administration. Ms. Senft was the initiator, Co-Creator, Lead Trainer and Supervisor for the Baltimore City Circuit Court Family Mediation Services program in 1998, which focuses on custody and visitation lawsuits and which continues to serve thousands of Baltimore families in the court system. Ms. Senft is the co-founder of The Safe Haven Network: a church, police, school, and community safety initiative for children in Baltimore City which has provided safe shelters before and after school for children and training in conflict intervention and safety skills to community residents and school officials since 1993 and which continues to provide safety to children today. Ms. Senft served as Chair of the Governor's Task Force on Youth Citizenship and Violence Prevention's Out-of-Schools Committee in 1995-96, and provided technical assistance in programming, violence reduction education and evaluation for the Governor's office on Crime Control and Prevention's state and federal funded initiative for community after school programs for late elementary and middle school youth throughout Maryland, 1996-1999. Ms. Senft has also served on numerous Bar Association committees, including presidential appointments to the Special Committee which drafted the Guidelines for the Prevention of Sexual Harassment adopted by the Maryland State Bar for law firms throughout the State, and the Chair of the 1994 publication "Baltimore's Children and Their Families." Prior to founding Baltimore Mediation, Ms. Senft was a litigator engaged in practice at the Baltimore law firm, Whiteford, Taylor and Preston in the areas of insurance, commercial defense and family law. She has served Board positions in her neighborhood, schools and church, including the National Catholic Review Board for Washington, DC/Arlington; she hails from Springfield, Illinois, attended the University of Virginia and Washington & Lee School of Law, was named Most Outstanding Woman Law Student, is married and the mother of five children.
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