RT Journal Article A1 Farahadayune Naharani Poetry A1 Alhadiansyah Alhadiansyah A1 Angga Prihatin A1 Putri Tio Octaria Mangunsong A1 Olyfia Febryanti Marpaung T1 The legal standing of the high prosecutor’s office as a mediator in the resolution of civil disputes between the government and civil society JF Priviet Social Sciences Journal YR 2025 VO 5 IS 12 SP 434-439 DO 10.55942/pssj.v5i12.1113 AB This study analyzes the legal status and institutional role of the Indonesian Prosecutor’s Office in mediating civil disputes between the government and civil society. Although the Prosecutor’s Office holds a sui generis position under national law—exercising prosecutorial powers alongside authority in civil and administrative matters—its structural placement within the executive branch raises concerns about neutrality and independence. The dual role of the Prosecutor’s Office as both mediator and State Attorney creates an inherent conflict of interest, potentially undermining the neutrality, procedural justice, and equality of arms essential to ADR. Drawing on doctrinal analysis and theories of procedural justice and separation of powers, this study argues that overlapping functions compromise mediation legitimacy. Public trust may decline when mediation is facilitated by an institution aligned with the disputing party. The study recommends limiting the Prosecutor’s Office to consultative functions, while substantive mediation should be handled by independent bodies. Clear functional demarcation and strengthened ethical guidelines are necessary to safeguard neutrality, accountability, and the rule of law. K1 prosecutor’s office, mediation, conflict of interest, procedural justice, ADR, separation of powers, legal neutrality LK https://journal.privietlab.org/index.php/PSSJ/article/view/1113 ER