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Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Lesson
5
PRECONCEPTIONS
ABOUT CONFLICT II
Quotations
If you
are patient in one moment of
anger, you will escape a
hundred days of sorrow.
(A
Chinese proverb)
Do not
find fault, find a
remedy.
Henry
Ford
The
greatest glory in living
lies not in falling, but in
rising every time we fall. Nelson
Mandela
Bronfenbrenner's
Theory of Social Ecology
Uri
Bronfenbrenner, an eminent developmental psychologist,
named the overall social
structure that acts
as
a
source of blueprints for
individuals the macrosystem. The
macrosystem includes the important
institutions
in
which we operate- the court
system, the governmental structure and so
on. In his influential
theory of
Social
Ecology, Bronfenbrenner postulated that
there is a synergistic relationship
between the macro
system
and
the individual.
Bronfenbrenner's
theory defines complex "layers" of
environment, each having an effect on a
child's
development.This
theory has recently been
renamed "bioecological
systems
theory" to emphasize that a
child's
own
biology is a primary environment fueling
her/his development. The interaction
between factors in the
child's maturing
biology, his immediate
family/community environment, and the
societal landscape
fuels
and
steers his development. Changes or
conflict in any one layer
will ripple throughout other
layers. To
study
a child's development then, we must look
not only at the child and
her immediate environment,
but
also
at the interaction of the larger
environment as well.
The
macro system is structured to reflect the
cultural belief systems of its
inhabitants-that is because a
society
is composed of its individual
members, and their collective
efforts maintain the macro system.
The
macro
system's structure generates
situations in which individuals, to
survive and do well, must
adopt
blueprints
and use tools consistent
with the overall cultural belief
systems.
Significance
for the study of ADR in
USA
Before embarking on
a study of conflict and the
processes of resolving it, it is
necessary to appreciate
that
people-
particularly from westernized cultures,
such as the United States-
have a narrow perspective on
what
conflict is and how it is
best managed and
resolved.
Approach
to the handling of interpersonal
conflict
a.
Highly individualistic
b. Featuring
adversarial resolution of most
disputes
c.
Reflected in a wide variety of societal
institutions and
policies
Cultural
beliefs about interpersonal
conflict
a.
Role of religion
b.
Conflict as battle
Tendency
to conceptualize interpersonal conflict as a
competition
Tendency
to conceptualize interpersonal conflict as a
"zero-sum" situation
Important
factor in the underuse of
"value-enlarging" processes, such as
principled
negotiation
and facilitative mediation
Individual
beliefs vs globalization, Parents vs
children are some of the
examples
Adversarial
approach in USA
In the American
system of government, the formalized structure
built to handle disputes
that people have
been
unable to resolve on their
own is the judicial system. Of
all the social systems that
reflect the
competitive/adversarial
blueprint for conflict resolution, the
American judicial system is the most
stark.
19
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
American
legal process is an adversary
process built on the notion
that justice is achievable
only through
competition.
The judicial system even
has a name reflective of this blueprint:
the adversary system.
Members
of the culture acquire the belief that
this individualistic, adversarial
approach is "best" in
that
These
cultural preferences and structures tend
to be invisible to inhabitants.
Developing
individuals to use adversarial
for their survival and to
flourish in the new
environment.
Most
opportunities to deal with
conflict are set within
institutional structures
that
encourage
this approach.
For
example, how is conflict
resolution portrayed on TV and in movies?
How does our
government
handle conflict?)
Develop
individuals' capacity by practice to
execute innovative ways to
handle conflict.
Role
of stress and emotion in creating
threat for a disputant.
Role
of stress and emotion in
creating the sense that the
other `disputant' is threatening to one's
well being
and
goals is following.
· Fear,
anger, depression, and urge
for happiness lead to
negative stereotyping of other
disputants
and
the belief that their
objectives are at odds with
one's own objectives. (Zero
sum situation)
· Tendency
for social perception during
conflict to produce overly
simplified, demonizing and
negative
portrait of other disputant.
· Ambiguity
of interpersonal conflict and
ambiguous behavior is taken to be
true.
· (Happy
family- discuss as an
example)
ADR
ADR
can be thought of as a radically
innovative set of ways and
means and a radically
different method for
the
resolution of conflict imposed on a
culture featuring an adversarial and
individualistic approach to
dispute
resolution.
ADR
innovation is often seen
through the "lens" of the traditional
adversary system of course
this
typically
leads to failure, causing its
users to reject ADR.
When
ADR processes are adopted,
often adversarial features
are added to them, which
dilute their
effectiveness.
Why
strategies of change fail
(ADR failure)
Following
are the four reasons of why
strategies of change
fail:
a)
Resistance and lack of support
from others
b)
Application of existing (traditional)
ways and means, rather than
innovative solutions
c) Lack of
proficiency in using innovative
tools
d) Support by
social structures of traditional
ways to resolve
disputes.
There is a
tendency for individuals to
attribute failures of innovation to the
superiority of the traditional
approach
rather than to the four reasons given
above.
20
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
How the
Conflict
Social
institutions reflect
predominant
Blueprint
adversarial
(Invisible Veil)
blueprint
Perpetuates
Itself
Individuals
usually
Powerful
and influential
people
experience
(lawmakers,
judges, school
blueprint-consistent
administrators,
etc.) apply
social
institutions
adversarial
blueprints and tools
Individuals
get
when
they maintain and
reform
lots
of practice
social
institutions
applying
People
transmit
adversarial
tools
adversarial
blueprints
Some
of
and
tools to their
these
children
through their
children
parenting
styles and
grow
up
Individuals
actions
to
be
become
proficient
Individuals
leaders
using
adversarial
have
their
tools
Invisible
Veil
beliefs
People
trying to apply alternative
blueprints find they
don't
confirmed
work as
well,
because
(1)
They apply unsuitable
tools,
(2)
They use suitable tools
without proficiency,
and
(3)
Social structures are
designed to support the
adversarial
blueprint
only
Mukhtaran
Mai
ADR
in USA
Lawyers and
the American Legal
System
American
"adversary legal system"
reflects individualistic, adversarial
cultural values.
Legal
disputing tradition assumes
that truth and justice
are best obtained via the
clash of legal
adversaries.
There is no
empirical evidence that truth is
best obtained in this manner the
authoritative pronouncements
on this
issue are judicial, not empirically
grounded.
(Fuller
and Randall do make an
argument that an adversary presentation
prevents bias but it does
not follow
that
truth will win out,
only that a more unbiased
result will be obtained.)
Some
opinion research of legal
and business professionals
suggests that there is not a
strong belief in the
ability
of the adversary system to produce
truth.
Lawyers
are steeped in adversary
tradition beginning with
their legal education.
Lawyers develop a high
degree
of mastery over the use of
adversarial tools. As would be predicted, this level
of mastery is
accompanied
by a narrowing of beliefs about
how best to handle interpersonal
conflict.
Basic
assumptions (beliefs) of the lawyer's
standard philosophical map:
Following
are the basic assumptions about
lawyer's philosophical
map.
Zero-sum
nature of all
disputes.
Applying
some general rule of law
will resolve interpersonal
conflict.
The
complaint Riskin makes about the lawyer's
standard philosophical map is that
while these beliefs will
be
true
for some disputes they are
not as widely applicable as many
lawyers assume.
Because
adversary processes have a number of
damaging consequences, they should not be
overused, and if
adversary
processes are assumed to be
"best," they will be.
21
Conflict
Management HRM624
VU
Legal
System in USA
Legal
system in USA reflects
societal dominant adversarial milieu.
Assumption is that justice is
achievable
only
through a clash between
adversaries or individuals.
Lawyer's
Standard Philosophical Map
Lawyer's
Standard Philosophical Map given by `Len
Riskin' has the following
assumptions
a.
Disputes are zero-sum
b.
Disputes must be submitted to a third
party, whose decision must be
based on the application of
law.
Limitations
of Lawyer's Standard Philosophical
Map
Over-application
of assumptions
Failure to see or
other appreciates factors
that can impact dispute
resolution.
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