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Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Lesson
31
MEDIATION
II
Quotations
Only
free men can negotiate;
prisoners cannot enter into
contracts. Nelson
Mandela (1918 - )
South
African
president and lawyer. Replying to an
offer to release him if he
renounced violence.
If you
choose to be a negotiator, you eliminate
worry about whether you
deserve to be successful.
Theodore
Zeldin (1933 - ) British
historian.
Uses
of Mediation Today
Mediation
has been around a very long time
and is used internationally.
Mediation has been
historically
present
in Pakistan in social and
business circles where
shared value systems prevail.
Costs of unresolved
disputing
can also lure for mediation. In
USA, mediation as a mainstream approach
to legal disputing in
general
first became common in the
1990s.
In the
recent past, there is a
substantial rise in the number of
mediators. Accordingly, mediation
is
becoming
more adversarial. Some mediation
proponents worry that this change
will eliminate some very
important
advantages of mediation as a non-adversarial
process. Mediation is actually an
ancient form of
conflict
resolution, having been used in Eastern
and African societies for
thousands of years. Even
today,
mediation is
practiced all over the
world. Elsewhere, mediation-like
styles of dispute resolution
are much
more
predominant than they are in
Western cultures, although mediation in
non-Western nations is often
quite
different from that in the
West.
In the
United States, mediation has
been used for centuries in
the commercial arena to maintain
good
ongoing
business relationships. Some religious
groups and traditional
Native American societies have
also
relied on mediation
style interventions to resolve
disputes among members; moreover,
historically the
handling
of conflicts in many ethnic communities by
powerful elders is very similar to
mediation.
The
past quarter-century marks the first time
that a consensual and
non-adversarial dispute
resolution
process
such as mediation has been
tried on such a broad and
mainstream basis in a time a society
of
unprecedented
social diversity. The 1990s
saw a dramatic expansion of mediation
into the legal
mainstream
it is
currently seen in the following
areas:
Labor
and employment relations, particularly in
federal agencies precipitated by a
host of federal
status
and
regulation.
State
civil litigation, particularly in
major urban metropolitan areas such as
Los Angeles, San
Francisco,
and
the District of Columbia
Federal
Civil Litigation: as of
1996, fifty-one federal
districts offered some form
of court-connected
mediation (Gauvey
2001)
Divorce
and Custody cases, both
private and court-connected
Special
education disputes among
schools, service providers and
parents of special-needs
children
Neighborhood
disputes
Disputes
between disputants of different
countries, in which the choice-of-law
problems are too
expensive
or
difficult to sort out in
court
Disputes
involving consumer grievance
against
commercial entities
Out
side the legal arena, in public
and private schools to
resolve conflicts and prevent violence by
and to
students;
those programs use students
trained to use mediation and
are called peer
mediation.
Forms
of Mediation
To
understand how mediation works, when it
is effective and what its advantages
and disadvantages are,
it
is
important to understand the great
diversity of mediation forms. In talking about the
advantages and
disadvantages
of mediation, it is important to realize
that each type of mediation has
its own distinct
characteristics,
uses, strengths, and
limitations.
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Management HRM624
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Important
distinguishing factors
1. Is the
process more facilitative or
more evaluative?
2.
Does the mediation deal narrowly
with the presenting dispute, or
deal with the entire
landscape
of the disputants' relationship?
3. How
much coercion is placed on the
disputants to settle?
Triage
mediation (court-connected
process)
Triage
mediation is believed to be relatively uncommon today. Formerly, it
was widely seen in court
systems
and
was developed to divert large
numbers of cases away from
the trial system.
This sort of
mediation is typically very brief and
focused. The goal
of
triage mediation is to get the
dispute
out of
the court system as quickly as
possible by seeking a quick
settlement. The focus
of
triage mediation is
typically
narrow it is focused in the short term on this
dispute
because that is all that's
needed to get the
case
out of court.
The
main advantage of triage mediation is
that it's cheap, it's quick, and it
clears court dockets.
However,
triage
mediation presents a number of significant problems
(Beck & Sales 2000).
Because its principal goal
is
to
save money and avoid court,
mediators are often poorly
trained and poorly and carry
overly heavy
caseload.
Goal:
to
divert the dispute out of the
system and obtain a quick
and inexpensive
settlement.
Focus:
Focus
is narrow. Process is usually highly
evaluative and quite
coercive.
Advantages:
It
is cheap and quick.
Disadvantages:
It
often uses poorly trained
mediators and/or imposes
overly heavy caseloads
on
mediators.
Because of pressures to divert
large numbers of cases,
mediators may be very
coercive.
Outcome is
less likely to respond to the
needs of disputants and
their constituents.
Advantage of
psychological ownership of the settlement is
lost.
Bargaining-Based
Mediation
Bargaining-based
mediation is an extremely common form of mediation.
Sometimes it called
concession-
hunting.
It is the predominant style used in
court-connected civil dispute mediation, as
well as the mediation
of
commercial, construction, and personal
injury cases.
The
primary goal of bargaining-based mediation is to
attain a fair agreement through
compromise. Lawyer
mediators
are more likely to use this
form of mediation than any
other. The focus is usually
narrow
and
the
process
is typically evaluative.
Bargaining-based
mediation is particularly good for cases
in which there are highly
divergent perceptions of
fact
or law because the divergent
perceptions may be the most
important impediment to settlement.
It's
also
good for cases involving
highly complex legal issues,
since lawyers tend to be
closely involved in the
mediation
process.
Because
the process is evaluative,
bargaining-based mediation tends to cause
the disputants to become
increasingly
position-bound. In other words, the
focus is on each disputant's
position and how
successful
he or
she is likely to be with
it.
Goals,
Advantages and Disadvantages of Bargaining-Based
mediation
Goal:
Its
goal is to get a fair
agreement through compromising.
Focus:
Focus
is usually narrow and process is
usually evaluative.
Usually the
process involves a series of separate
"caucus" meetings in which the mediator
tears down each
side's
assessment of the merits of their
case. Facilitative tactics may
also be used to nudge the
disputants
into
settlement.
This
process resembles lawyer-assisted
negotiation.
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Note:
What is Caucus
Caucus
is a meeting between a mediator and
one disputant (with or without the
disputant's representatives),
out
the earshot of the other disputant and
his or her representatives. A
caucus is different from a
joint
session,
which all the disputants
involve in mediation, and/or their
representatives, attend.
Advantages:
1. Bargaining
based mediation is particularly good for
cases in which there are
highly divergent perceptions
of fact or
law.
2.
Good for situations with
highly complex legal
issues
3.
Saves time
4.
Feels familiar to legal
advocates
Disadvantages:
1.
Promotes positional bargaining may
produce impasse and conflict
escalation.
2. If
conflict is already escalated, it's
unlikely to work.
3.
Outcomes are usually
restricted to money and
often display a lack of
creativity.
4.
Psychological ownership may be
low.
5.
Only mediators with
subject-matter expertise will be
able to muster the authoritative
presence needed to
do the
work.
Therapeutic
Mediation
Therapeutic
mediation is generally designed to
improve the relationship of the disputants, so
that they are
able
to settle their conflicts. However, it is
sometimes unclear what the goal of
therapeutic mediation is.
This is a problem.
Mediation has many
similarities to therapy, and,
because there are so many
varieties of
mediation, it
can be difficult to define the difference.
The problem with therapeutic mediation
occurs when
the neutral is
unclear about what the goals
are.
Nonetheless,
therapeutic mediation, if its goals are
clearly defined, can be both
necessary and very helpful
in
high-conflict
situation, particularly those involving a disputant
who has a mental illness or
an emotional or
personality
disorder requiring high levels of
professional support before he or she
can negotiate effectively.
Goals,
Advantages and Disadvantages of Therapeutic
Mediation
Goals:
1. It is to
improve relationship functioning so that
conflicts can be resolved.
2.
Focus is extremely broad and
facilitative.
3.
Much like counseling the mediator
explores reasons for relationship
breakdown and also helps
parties
explore
solutions.
4.
This process resembles
lawyer-assisted negotiation.
Advantages:
1. Can
improve overall functioning so
disputants with a continuing relationship
can resolve future
conflicts
2.
Useful in escalated conflict
between former intimate
partners
3. Can
assist disputants whose mental-health
issues are impeding
Disadvantage:
Mediators
need to make their roles
very clear; otherwise, conflicts of
interest and role confusion
may result.
Pure
Mediation
Pure
mediation is a facilitative process whose
goal is to promote collaborative, integrative,
principled
bargaining.
(It is very important to note
that the goal of pure mediation is not
to
reach agreement but,
rather,
to
promote the sorts of negotiation
behaviors that will lead to
reaching agreement.)
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Pure
mediation is often seen in community and
divorce mediation, and it is being found in
other contexts in
increasing
numbers. This form of mediation is also
becoming more accepted by the
legal profession. It is
highly
facilitative, and the breadth of issues
dealt with is as broad or narrow as the
disputants wish it to
be.
There
are many advantages to pure mediation.
They mirror many of the advantages we
have already noted
for
mediation in general. Since pure mediation
facilitates principled bargaining, the
agreements reached
tend
to be
highly creative, win-win
outcomes that optimized the
use of resources. Pure mediation
may have long-
term benefits
for disputants who must
continue a relationship.
Pure
Mediation
Goal: It is to
facilitate Collaborating/Integrating negotiation
between the disputants.
Focus: as
narrow or broad as the disputants decide
to make it. It is highly
facilitative and non-coercive.
Mediators
work to restore or maintain a cooperation
cycle and to deescalate the
conflict.
Advantages:
1.
Best at retaining the advantages of cooperative
negotiation optimal outcomes,
preserved relationships,
psychological
ownership.
2.
Even if agreement isn't
reached, substantive improvements in relationship
and narrowing of
conflict
often
result, making other dispute
resolution easier and
faster.
3. Disputants
often have issues clarified,
which empowers them if other
dispute resolution processes
are
needed.
Disadvantages:
1.
More time-consuming than evaluative
processes (short term).
2. May
not be appropriate for marginally
functioning disputants.
3.
Marketing problems disputants
and their attorneys often
prefer evaluative
approaches.
If mediator is
incompetent this is a poor option.
More
Advantages and Disadvantages of Pure
Mediation
There
are long-term benefits even if
agreement is not
reached:
Pure
mediation narrows the issues, so that, if
another dispute resolution process is
required, it's likely to be
easier
and faster.
There is a
good chance that the
disputants will be more cooperative, so
other alternatives will not
be as
expensive,
time-consuming, or traumatic.
Pure
mediation can teach
principled bargaining to the disputants, so
that they can use it
elsewhere in their
lives.
There are fewer disadvantages to pure
mediation than we have seen for
other varieties of mediation,
but it
does raise a few problems. First, if time
is an important consideration and if only
a narrow, short-term
perspective
is important, bargaining-based mediation
may be a better choice.
Transformative
Mediation
Transformative
mediation resembles pure mediation, except
that its goals are
even more completely
removed
from "getting an agreement." There
are two primary transformative
goals:
Empowerment: the
improvement of the personal power of each
disputant
Recognition: the
ability of each disputant to take the
perspective of the other disputant and
to
communicate
this sense of understanding to the other
disputant.
Transformative
mediation's advantages are similar to
those of pure mediation. Agreements
reached in
transformative
mediation are psychologically owned in
full by the disputants, who
are very likely to abide
by
them.
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Goals,
Advantages and Disadvantages of Transformative
Mediation
Goals:
1. It is to
promote empowerment and
recognition of each disputant.
2. Its
focus is very broad and
facilitative.
3.
Process is very fluid and
involves having the disputants tell
about the situation.
4.
Mediator takes advantage of
any opportunity to confer power
and recognition on each
disputant.
Advantages:
As
with pure mediation; may be even better
than pure mediation at conferring
psychological ownership.
Research
suggests that it may be effective in
"transforming" disputes constructively,
and there are
claims
that
its widespread use would
transform and improve society at
large.
Disadvantages:
Disputants
may not want this form of mediation
(since it does not claim to
have settlement as a goal)
marketing
dilemma.
Research
is not clear that it has the
advantages it claims.
Forms of
mediation
Form
Typical
Adherents
Major
Goals
Untrained
mediators,
Getting an agreement cheaply and
Triage
mediation
underfunded
court
quickly
systems
Bargaining-based
Lawyer-mediators,
Getting
a "fair: settlement, getting
a
mediation
retired
judges
compromise
Therapeutic
Mental-health
Improving
the relationship between
the
disputants,
so they can work
better
mediation
professionals
together
and avoid present and
future
conflict
Some
private mediators, Facilitating
collaboration between
the
Pure
mediation
particularly
family law
disputants
to get a win-win
outcome
Transformative
Expanding
use among
Extremely
broad, facilitative;
promote
private
mediators, used
empowerment
of each disputant and
mediation
by
U.S. Postal Service
recognition
of
each
disputant's
perspective
and situation by the
other;
REGRESS
program
attaining
settlement considered a
secondary
goal
Legal
Assistants and Paralegals
Paralegals
are becoming increasingly
important members of the legal
team, and many of the
activities for
lawyers
in the mediation process are appropriate
paralegal functions.
Role:
1.
His/her role is to do anything the
lawyer could have done except
negotiate on the lawyer's behalf
and
give
legal advice. Particularly important
role is in case and client
preparation, interests and BATNA
analysis.
2.
Keep roster of mediators and
make recommendations.
3.
Paralegals attend mediation sessions;
assist and keep
records.
4.
They act as mediators (some
disputes and jurisdictions).
Summary
We
have learnt five different forms of
mediation. Depending upon the nature of
disputants and the nature
of
conflict, you can pick
and choose one or more forms
of mediation to resolve the conflict
between
participants.
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