The Mediation Process: Practical Strategies for Resolving Conflict

Höfundur Christopher W. Moore

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781118304303

Útgáfa 4

Útgáfuár 2014

8.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Contents
  • List of Tables and Figures
  • Dedication
  • Preface
  • Part One: Understanding Disputes, Conflict Resolution, and Mediation
  • 1: Approaches for Managing and Resolving Disputes and Conflicts
  • The Whittamore-Singson Dispute
  • Conflict Management and Resolution Approaches and Procedures
  • 2: The Mediation Process: Mediator Roles, Functions, Approaches, and Procedures
  • Mediator Roles, Functions, Approaches, and Procedures
  • A Definition of Mediation
  • Some Variations in Mediator Relationships to Parties and Assistance
  • Social Network Mediators
  • Authoritative Mediators
  • Independent Mediators
  • Variations of Mediators’ Targets, Focus, Levels of Interventions, and Direction
  • Mediators’ Focuses for Intervention
  • Mediator’s Amount of Action and Direction
  • Mediator Orientations toward Focus and Direction in Practice
  • “Schools” of Mediation
  • Process-Focused Schools
  • Relationship-Focused Schools
  • Substantively Focused Schools
  • The Focus of the Remainder of This Book
  • 3: The Practice of Mediation
  • Historical and Cultural Roots of Mediation: Religious and Customary Practices
  • Contemporary Practice of Mediation
  • North America
  • Mediation Around the World
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Latin America
  • The Middle East
  • Oceania Pacific Region
  • 4: Conflict Analysis: Understanding the Causes of Conflicts and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • Understanding the Causes of Conflicts and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • The Circle of Conflict: Causes of Disputes and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • Three Broad Concepts about Conflict and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • Issues, Needs, and Interests
  • Factors That Are Sources or Causes of Conflict and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • People and Parties
  • Issues, Needs, and Interests
  • Parties’ Histories, Relationships, and Interactions
  • Emotions
  • Information
  • Communications
  • Approaches, Procedures, and Strategies
  • Power and Influence
  • Structural Sources of Conflict and Opportunities for Collaboration
  • Beliefs, Values, and Attitudes
  • Options, Understandings, Agreements, and Outcomes
  • Returning to Dividers and Connectors
  • 5: Negotiation and Conflict Resolution
  • Transactional and Conflict Resolution–Oriented Negotiations
  • Relationship-Based Negotiations
  • Positional-Based Negotiations
  • Interest-Based Negotiations
  • How Mediators Work with Various Orientations and Procedures for Negotiations
  • Part Two: Laying the Groundwork for Effective Mediation
  • 6: The Mediation Process: An Overview
  • The Stages of the Mediation Process
  • Preparation Stages, Goals, Tasks, and Activities
  • 1. Making Initial Contact with Parties
  • 2. Collecting and Analyzing Background Information
  • 3. Designing a Preliminary Mediation Plan
  • Mediation Session Stages, Tasks, and Activities
  • 1. Beginning Mediation
  • 2. Presenting Parties’ Initial Perspectives and Developing an Agenda
  • 3. Educating about Issues, Needs, and Interests and Framing Problems to Be Resolved
  • 4. Generating Options and Problem Solving
  • 5. Evaluating and Refining Options for Understandings and Agreements
  • 6. Reaching Agreements and Achieving Closure
  • 7. Implementing and Monitoring Understandings and Agreements, and Developing Mechanisms to Resolve P
  • 7: Making Initial Contacts with Disputing Parties
  • Tasks of the Mediator in the Entry Stage
  • Building Credibility
  • Establishing Rapport with Disputants
  • Educating Participants About the Mediation Process
  • Gaining a Commitment to Mediate
  • Implementation of Entry
  • Data Collection
  • Problem Solving
  • 8: Collecting and Analyzing Background Information
  • Framework for Analysis
  • Timing of Data Collection
  • The Data Collector
  • Forums for Data Collection Interviews
  • Data Collection Methods
  • Direct Observation and Site Visits
  • Reviews of Primary and Secondary Sources
  • Interviewing
  • Data Collection Strategies
  • Identification of Parties
  • Sequencing of Interviews
  • Development of Rapport and Credibility
  • Interviewing Approaches
  • Focused Versus Nonfocused Interviews
  • Structured Versus Nonstructured Interviews
  • Communication and Interviewing Procedures and Skills
  • Nonverbal Communication
  • Listening and Feedback
  • Questioning and Questions
  • Recording Information
  • Data Collection by Co-Mediators and in Multiparty Disputes
  • Reporting Data
  • Integration of Data
  • Verification of Data
  • Conflict Analysis
  • Presentation of Data and Analysis to Disputing Parties
  • Making a Go/No-Go Decision on Whether or Not to Proceed with Mediation
  • 9: Designing a Plan for Mediation
  • Participants in Negotiations
  • Friends, Witnesses, Constituents, and Secondary Parties
  • Lawyers, Therapists, and Other Resource Persons
  • The Media and Mediation
  • Location and Venue for Mediation
  • Physical Arrangement of the Venue
  • General Consideratons for Designing a Plan for Mediatiation
  • Psychological Conditions of the Parties
  • Issues, Interests, and Settlement Options
  • Negotiation Procedures
  • Detailed Planning to Begin the First Joint Mediation Session
  • Thinking about Mutual Education of Parties
  • Developing Strategies to Respond to Possible Deadlocks
  • Part Three: Conducting Productive Mediation Meetings
  • 10: Beginning Mediation
  • Welcoming the Parties
  • Handling Introductions and Opening Communications
  • Mediator and Participants’ Introductions and Statements About Their Backgrounds
  • The Mediator’s Opening Statement and Discussion of Aspects of the Mediation Process
  • Recognition and Affirmation of Parties’ Willingness to Meet and Seek Mutually Acceptable Solutions
  • Clarification of Mediation, the Process to Be Used, and the Mediator’s Role
  • Mediation as a Voluntary Process
  • Statement about the Mediator’s Relationships with Parties, Neutrality, and Impartiality
  • Identifying and Reaching Agreement on Proposed Mediation Procedures
  • Explanation of and Agreement on the Use of Private Meetings
  • Clarification of the Limits of Confidentiality
  • Description and Agreement on Logistics
  • Identification and Agreement on Meeting Guidelines
  • Confirmation of Understandings on the Costs of Mediation and How They Will Be Handled
  • Answers to Questions
  • Commitment to Begin Mediation
  • Making the Transition to the Next Stage
  • Cultural Variations
  • 11: Presenting Parties’ Initial Perspectives and Developing an Agenda
  • Opening Statements by Parties
  • The Problem of Limited Information
  • Openings Focused on Substance
  • Openings Focused on Procedure
  • Openings Focused on the Relationships
  • The Choice of Opening
  • The Transition to Parties’ Opening Statements
  • Facilitation of Communication and Information Exchange in Opening Statements
  • Creation of a Positive Emotional Climate
  • Cultural Variations in Parties’ Opening Statements
  • Framing Issues and Setting an Agenda
  • Identifying and Framing Issues
  • Variables in Framing and Reframing Issues
  • Reframing and Meaning
  • Levels of Framing
  • Reframing Issues, Positions, and Interests
  • Implicit and Explicit Framing and Reframing and Timing
  • Appropriate Language
  • Mediators, Framing and Reframing
  • Framing and Reframing Broad Topic Areas for Discussion
  • Developing the Agenda
  • Ad Hoc Development
  • Simple Agenda
  • Alternation of Issues
  • Ranking by Importance
  • Principled Agenda
  • “Easier Items First”
  • Building-Block or Contingent Agenda
  • Trade-Offs or Packaging
  • Handling Difficult Framing and Agenda Develolpment Issues
  • Consensual or Interest-Based Conflicts
  • Dissensual or Potentially Value-Based Conflicts
  • Cultural Approaches to Agenda Formation
  • 12: Educating about Issues, Needs, and Interests and Framing Problems to Be Resolved
  • Determining What Information Needs to Be Presented and Exchanged
  • Where Information Should Be Presented and Exchanged
  • How to Promote Effective Presentations and Exchange of Information
  • Difficulties in Identifying Needs and Interests
  • Lack of Awareness of Needs and Interests
  • Intentional Hiding of Needs and Interests
  • Equating Needs and Interests with Specific Positions
  • Lack of Awareness of Procedures for Exploring Needs and Interests
  • Cultivating Positive Attitudes Toward Interest Exploration
  • Procedures for Assisting Parties to Educate Each Other and Present and Clarify Needs and Interests
  • Direct Procedures for Identifying Interests
  • Positions, Interests, and Bluffs
  • Interest Identification, Acceptance, and Agreement
  • Framing Joint Problem Statements
  • Cultural Approaches
  • 13: Generating Options and Problem Solving
  • Development of an Awareness of the Need for Multiple Options
  • Detachment of Parties from Unacceptable Positions
  • Psychological Means of Reducing Commitment
  • Procedural Means of Reducing Commitment
  • Leverage
  • General Approaches and Strategies for Option Generation
  • The Building-Block Approach to Settlement
  • Identification of a Bargaining Formula or Agreements in Principle to Guide Option Generation and Set
  • General Strategies for Generating Options
  • Positional-Based Negotiations
  • Interest-Based Negotiations
  • Specific Option-Generation Procedures
  • Ratification of the Status Quo
  • Development of Objective Standards for an Acceptable Agreement
  • Open Discussion
  • Brainstorming
  • Nominal Group Process
  • Plausible Hypothetical Scenarios
  • Vision Building
  • Model Agreements
  • Links-and-Trades
  • Single-Text Negotiating Document
  • Procedural Solutions to Reach Substantive Agreements
  • Package Agreements
  • Use of Outside Experts or Resources
  • Mediator Suggestions
  • Forums for Option Generation
  • Option Generation in the Whittamore-Singson Case
  • Cultural Approaches
  • 14: Evaluating and Refining Options for Understandings and Agreements
  • Evaluating Settement Ranges, Positions, and Options
  • Evaluation Criteria and Procedures
  • Evaluating the Satisfaction of Parties’ Interests
  • Evaluating the Congruence of Options with Objective Standards and Criteria
  • Evaluating the Potential Strength of Agreements
  • Evaluating the Feasibility of Implementing Options
  • Evaluating Options against the “Reasonable Person Test” or the “Pride Test”
  • Evaluating Options Using Parties’ Intuitions and Feelings
  • Recognizing and Enhancing a Positive Joint Settlement Range
  • Handling a Negative Joint Settlement Range
  • Review Possible Outcomes to a Conflict
  • Inform One or More Parties That Their Counterparts Have Reached Their Bottom Line
  • Develop a Response for a Genuine Negative Joint Settlement Range
  • Refining Options
  • Option Evaluation and Refining Options in the Whittamore-Singson Case
  • Cultural Approaches
  • 15: Reaching Understandings and Agreements and Achieving Closure
  • Strategies for Reaching Final Agreements
  • Incremental Convergence
  • Fear of Overconceding or Revealing Bargaining Positions
  • Fear of Being Perceived as Weak
  • Negative Transference
  • Fear of Rejection and Impasse
  • Public Pressure on Negotiators
  • Loss of Face
  • Links, Trades, and Joint Development of Package Agreements
  • Formulas and Agreements in Principle
  • Leap to Agreement
  • Procedural Means to Reach Substantive Agreements
  • The Procedural-Time-Line Approach
  • Third-Party Decision Makers
  • Mechanical Decision-Making Procedures
  • Postponement, Avoidance, and Issue Abandonment
  • Integrative Approaches with Combinations of One or More of the above Strategies
  • Mediator Assistance to Recognize and Confirm Understandings and Agreements
  • Reaching Substantive Closure and Formalizing the Agreement
  • Substantive Agreements, Closure, and Commitment-Inducing Procedures
  • Voluntary Agreement and Commitment-Inducing Procedures
  • Externally Induced Commitment Procedures
  • Procedural Closure
  • Psychological Closure and Redefinition of Parties’ Relationships
  • Approaches for Promoting Psychological Closure
  • Forgiveness and Reconciliation
  • The Mediator’s Role in Forgiveness and Reconciliation
  • Closure, Ritual, and Symbolic Conflict Termination Activities
  • Reaching Agreements and Achieving Closure in the Whittamore-Singson Case
  • Cultural Approaches
  • 16: Implementing and Monitoring Understandings and Agreements
  • Procedural Closure, Implementation, and Monitoring
  • Criteria for Compliance and Implementation Steps
  • Monitoring the Performance of Agreements
  • Provisions and Procedures for Resolving Future Disputes
  • Implementing and Monitoring Agreements in the Whittamore-Singson Case
  • Cultural Approaches to Monitoring
  • Part Four: Strategies for Responding to Special Situations
  • 17: Strategies for Responding to Special Situations
  • Private Meetings
  • Factors That May Make a Caucus Desirable or Necessary
  • Timing for Private Meetings
  • Locations and Venues for Private Meetings
  • Protocol for Calling Private Meetings
  • Private Meetings and Manipulation
  • Time, Timing, and Deadlines
  • Internally and Externally Established Deadlines
  • Coordinated and Uncoordinated Deadlines
  • Actual and Artificial Deadlines
  • Rigid and Flexible Deadlines
  • Deadlines with and without Consequences
  • Explicit or Vague Deadlines
  • Mediators and Deadline Management
  • Making Parties Aware of Deadlines
  • Assisting Parties to Effectively Use Deadlines
  • Avoiding Deadline Dangers
  • Culture, Time, and Deadlines
  • Exerting Mediator Influence
  • Coordinating Parties’ Means of Influence
  • Management of the Negotiation Process
  • Communication between and within Parties
  • Physical Setting and Negotiations
  • Timing in Negotiations
  • Information Exchanged between Parties
  • Authority
  • Habits of Disputants
  • Parties’ Doubts
  • Appeals to Beliefs, Values, or Morals
  • Rewards or Benefits
  • Coercive Influence
  • The Mediator’s Personality
  • Using External Parties to Influence Disputants
  • Experts
  • Power Balance between Parties
  • Symmetrical Power Relations
  • Asymmetrical Power Relations
  • Mediation, Culture, and Gender
  • Grand Strategies for Responding to Temporal Sources of Conflicts
  • Start with Past Issues and Relationships
  • Work on the Past and Then Go to the Present
  • Work on the Past and Then Go to the Future
  • Do Not Start with the Past
  • Start with Current or Present Issues and Relationships
  • Start with Future Issues and Relationships
  • Work on the Future and Then Go to the Present or Past
  • Start with One Temporal Orientation and Switch to Another
  • Approaches for Mediating Disputes Involving Strong Beliefs or Values
  • Responding to Conflicts Involving Strong Beliefs and Values
  • Why Are Conflicts Involving Beliefs and Values So Difficult to Resolve?
  • General Considerations for Responding to Belief or Value Differences
  • Responding to Beliefs or Values without Trying to Change Them
  • Avoid Framing Issues or Problems in Terms of Belief or Value Differences
  • Address or Resolve Peripheral Conflict Elements or Issues
  • Change the Parties’ Relationships, Not Their Beliefs or Values
  • Increase Understanding and Tolerance for Diverse Beliefs or Values
  • Respond to Beliefs and Values by Trading Satisfaction of Values or Translating Them into Interests
  • Respond to Beliefs and Values by Creating Tensions between Those Held by One Party
  • Identify Shared Superordinate Beliefs, Values, or Principles—or Create New Ones
  • Refer Belief and Value Conflicts to a Third-Party Decision Maker
  • 18: Strategies for Multiparty Mediation
  • Negotiations and Teams
  • Team Dynamics and Mediation Strategies
  • Types of Team Negotiations
  • Spokesperson Models
  • Multiparty Negotiation Forums, Formats, and Procedures
  • Teams with Constituents
  • Part Five: Toward an Excellent Practice of Mediation
  • 19: Toward an Excellent Practice of Mediation
  • Codification of the Practice of Mediation and a Written Body of Knowledge
  • Formal Training, University Courses, and Degrees
  • Training Programs
  • University Programs
  • Private Independent Practitioners and Organizations That Provide Professional Mediation Services
  • Mediation and Dispute Resolution Associations
  • Codes of Ethics and Standards of Practice
  • Qualifications for Specific Areas of Practice
  • Regulating Entry, Practice, and Performance of Practitioners
  • Resource A: Professional Practice Guidelines
  • Model Standards of Conduct for Mediators
  • The Model Standards of Conduct for Mediators—2005
  • Preamble
  • Standard I. Self-Determination
  • Standard II. Impartiality
  • Standard III. Conflicts of Interest
  • Standard IV. Competence
  • Standard V. Confidentiality
  • Standard VI. Quality of the Process
  • Standard VII. Advertising and Solicitation
  • Standard VIII. Fees and Other Charges
  • Standard IX. Advancement of Mediation Practice
  • Resource B: Mediation Services Agreement
  • Resource C: Checklist for Mediator Opening Remarks/Statement
  • Resource D: Settlement Documentation Form
  • References
  • About the Author
  • Index
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