Conciliators: Salary, career path, job outlook, education and more

Conciliators are similar to mediators. Although their role is to help guide opposing sides to a settlement, they typically meet with the parties separately. The opposing sides must decide in advance if they will be bound by the conciliators recommendations.

Education Required
Education is one part of becoming an arbitrator, mediator, or conciliator.
Training Required
Mediators typically work under the supervision of an experienced mediator for a certain number of cases before working independently.
Job Outlook
The projected percent change in employment from 2016 to 2026: 11% (Faster than average)
(The average growth rate for all occupations is 7 percent.)
Licenses/Certifications
There is no national license for arbitrators, mediators, and conciliators. However, some states require arbitrators and mediators to become certified to work on certain types of cases. Qualifications, standards, and the number of training hours required vary by state or by court. Most states require mediators to complete 20 to 40 hours of training courses to become certified. Some states require additional hours of training in a specialty area.
Median pay: How much do Arbitrators, Mediators, and Conciliators make?
$59,770 Annual Salary
$28.74 per hour

Careers for Arbitrators, Mediators, and Conciliators

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