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Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Lesson
30
MEDIATION
I
Quotations
"A
pessimist sees the difficulty in
every opportunity; an optimist
sees the opportunity in every
difficulty."
Winston
Churchill
It's a
well-known proposition that
you know who's going to win
a negotiation: it's he who
pauses the
longest.
Robert
Holmes ŕ Court (1937 - 1990)
Australian entrepreneur.
In this
lecture we will try to explore
and study the following
points:
1.
What mediation is and how it
differs from other ADR
processes.
2. The
difference between facilitative and
evaluative mediation.
3.
That the product of mediation, should the
disputants reach agreement, is a
valid, binding, and
enforceable
contract.
4. The
uses of mediation today.
5. The
five basic varieties of mediation
and their goals,
characteristics, advantages, and
disadvantages.
6. The
roles played in mediation by mediators,
disputants, disputants' lawyers,
paralegals, constituents
and
stakeholders,
and experts/consultants.
Mediation
Mediation
is second class justice. It is a type of
assisted negotiation that
uses a third party (or panel
of third
parties)
to help disputants negotiate
their settlement. This third party,
who is called the mediator, is
typically
impartial
with respect to the disputants
and neutral as to the settlement
reached.
In
USA, there is a huge burden of
work on courts. To alleviate
that burden, ADR movement has
been
started
in the US. An emerging and
increasingly popular form of
ADR is mediation. Although interest
in
and
use of ADR has grown
significantly in the past decade, it is
still in a relatively early stage
of
development.
In
general, the operation of mediation aims
to facilitate the development of consensual solutions by
the
disputing
parties. The mediation process is
overseen by a non-partisan third party, the mediator,
whose
authority
rests on the consent of the parties
that she facilitates their
negotiations.
The
mediator has no independent decision-making power, or
legitimacy, beyond what the parties
voluntarily
afford
her.... While mediators use
many strategies and
techniques to encourage the parties to
reach an
agreement,
for example helping to
generate so-called 'objective criteria'
which both parties recognize
as
valid,
and in some cases assisting
them with specific provisions of any
settlement arrangement, the
final
result
of a mediated agreement must be
legitimized by disputants.
Depending
on his or her approach and
style, the mediator can take an
active role in the process or
remain
more
passive, only intervening
when necessary to facilitate communication, clarify,
or focus the participants
on the
important issues at
hand.
The
function of the mediator is determined in part by the
desires of the parties and in
part by the attitude of
the
individual mediator. Some mediators
propose settlement terms and
attempt to persuade parties to
make
concessions.
Other mediators work only
with the party-generated proposals
and try to help
parties
realistically
assess their options. Most
mediators will provide an
environment in which the parties
can
communicate
constructively with each other
and assist the parties in overcoming
obstacles to settlement.
Legal
counsel can be present in the mediation,
but they are often
encouraged to take a less
active role,
allowing
the parties to dialogue and
negotiate themselves. Further, the
procedure of the mediation itself
is
primarily
controlled by the parties' mutual
agreement (e.g. over
confidentiality agreements, the use
of
caucusing,
etc.) with assistance from
the mediator.
One
function the mediator can perform in the
collective bargaining situation is that of reminding
the parties
that
their negotiations constitute a cooperative enterprise
and that one does
not necessarily make a gain
for
himself simply
because he denies to the other
fellow something he wants.
"The rule must be that
you give,
so far
as is possible, what is less valuable to
you but more valuable to the
receiver; and you receive
what is
more
valuable to you and less
valuable to the giver."
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Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Resolution of the
dispute, like negotiation, is determined
entirely by the participants themselves
through
mutual
agreement - no result will be
imposed on them by the mediator. Although the mediator
is usually
paid
for his or her services, a
successful mediation will invariably
save all parties money on
further litigation.
Ultimately,
in theory at least, what is common to mediation as it
is used in many different
contexts is that
the
outcome is consensual rather than
imposed and the solution
fashioned by the parties themselves
rather
than
by a third party.
Mediation
(Important points to remember)
1. A
kind of facilitated or assisted
negotiation process.
2.
Mediation is done through a third-party
neutral person.
3. The
mediator's main role is to
assist the disputants in negotiating or in coming to
an agreement.
4.
However, the disputants retain the power to
conflict resolution.
5.
Mediation is a type of assisted
negotiation that uses a
third party (or panel of
third parties) to
help
disputants
negotiate their settlement.
This third party, who is
called the mediator, is typically
impartial with
respect
to the disputants and neutral as to the
settlement reached.
When
is mediation required
When
interpersonal conflict occurs, the most
common approach to resolving it is negotiation
an interplay
and a
dialogue between the disputants and
their representatives aimed at resolving
the conflict. If
negotiation
does not resolve the
conflict, and if the conflict
involves legal issues,
litigation is the only
option
many
disputants see as recourse.
It should be
evident from previous lectures
that negotiation offers many benefits
over litigation. From
the
individual
disputants' perspectives, negotiation
offers relationship preservation, the opportunity
for creative
problem
solving, economy, time-saving, and a
greater likelihood that the
settlement will not unravel
over
time. Of
course, a principal drawback to
negotiation is that sometimes it
fails to produce a settlement.
Is
there
any way to preserve the
advantages of negotiated settlement particularly
those of collaborating
when a
negotiation leads to impasse or when it
is anticipated that negotiation is not
likely to settle the
dispute?
It is mediation.
Related
Concepts
Facilitative
mediation
In
facilitative mediation, the mediator's primary
function is to promote effective
negotiation or dialogue.
Facilitative
mediators use techniques
designed to promote effective negotiation
as they view it: they
lay
ground
rules for effective communication, help
participants discover their interests
and those of their
counterparts,
guide the disputants in the steps of
cooperative negotiation, and intervene at
all stages of the
conflict
cycle to keep the conflict as
noncompetitive as possible. The strictly
facilitative mediator
assiduously
avoids any evaluation of the merits or
strengths of either disputant's
case.
Evaluative
mediation
In evaluative
mediation, the mediator's primary function is to
narrow the gap between the positions
taken
by the
two disputants. Evaluative mediation
assumes that negotiation
will be a process of
positional
bargaining.
Another way to think of this
process is that evaluative mediation is a
process of BATNA
clarification.
Nonbinding evaluation is different from
evaluative mediation. Mediator will go
beyond
evaluation
and broker settlement. In
nonbinding evaluation, the process
generally stops with
evaluation.
In
evaluative mediation, the mediator works to narrow the
gap between the demands of
each disputant by
expressly
evaluating the merits, strengths, and
weaknesses of each disputant's
position and by
strategically
communicating
these evaluations to the disputants. In
extreme forms of evaluative mediation,
the
centerpiece
of the process may be a single evaluation
of the likely outcome if the dispute is
taken to court.
An
extremely evaluative mediation may
closely resemble nonbinding evaluation:
the neutral hears all
sides
of the
issue and then issues an
opinion regarding how the
case might be decided if it
were to be litigated.
105
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
There is
also much blurring in
practice between facilitative
and evaluative mediation. Many
mediator
practice
midway along this continuum, and
some mediators jump from
facilitative to evaluative
approaches
based
on what they think will promote the
goals of the mediation.
Processes
Related to Mediation
Settlement
conference or meeting court
process in which a judge
moderates a meeting with
the
disputants'
lawyers in which the group
organizes a case headed for
trial. It helps to soften the
conflict.
Facilitation
is generally, a process in which a
mediator helps to prepare for a complex
negotiation.
Conciliation
has no set definition.
Sometimes it is used to describe
mediation, sometimes nonbinding
evaluation
and sometimes
facilitation.
Settlement
Conference
A
settlement conference is a judicially
created process presided
over by a judge. Settlement conferencing
is
used
for legal disputes filed in
court and headed for
trial.
Facilitation
A
process in which a neutral third party,
or panels of neutrals, helps
prepare for complex
negotiation.
Typically,
facilitation is used if an interpersonal
conflict involves multiple, complex
parties and issues.
Conciliation
Applied
to numerous processes conceptually
related to mediation. Sometimes the term applied to
mediation
itself,
sometimes it is applied to facilitation;
sometimes it is applied to nonbinding
evaluation.
Results
of Mediation
Settlement
may or may not come
about as disputants may not
agree. Settlement may be
partial or total. It
may be
permanent or interim/temporary.
Settlement is usually in written
form.
The
mediator may write a "memorandum of
agreement" and lawyers can
formalize it.
Some
mediators draft agreements
themselves. Settlements reached in
mediation are enforceable
contracts,
just
as they are in any other
negotiation process. Mediation
may mention special
enforceability issues.
Since
mediation is
confidential, there are
special concerns that
involve proof of or defenses to a
mediated
agreement.
Product of
Mediation
If the
disputants reach an agreement of
some sort in mediation, some mediators
provide the parties with
the
written
memorandum of settlement, memorandum,
memorandum of agreement, or memorandum
of
understanding
(MOU).
This document is
not intended to be binding
but, instead, is "translated" by the
parties' legal advocates
into
a contract of
settlement, or stipulation; or, if the
mediation is of a case filed in court, by the
judge into an
order
or judgment.
Summary
We learnt
about mediation. This is needed when either
negotiation fails or negotiation is not
possible due to
positional
gap. Mediation is done through a
third party who is neutral and
just brings the disputants to
settle
the
dispute without going to the expensive
court procedures.
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