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Introduction:
Civil rights mediator Dick Salem explains how you help disputants devise an acheivable agenda.
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This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Reframing the Agenda
Richard Salem
Former CRS Mediator, Chicago Office
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[Full Interview]
Question: Who decides what they need, do you or do they?
Answer: We always start with what the group says it needs. It would be nice to sit here and say they
tell us and we respond, but the reality is when you do enough of these for enough years you can
sort of pretty well see whats needed and whats happening and you can lead the community
group into knowing what it needs very often. One simple thing is helping a group understand it
needs a good agenda if is going into negotiations, with or without a mediator. That grievances
should be presented in a way that they can be responded to. If the agenda is fire the school
superintendent, or fire the police chief, you know that's not likely to be achievable. You
encourage them to shape an agenda that puts that at the bottom and started with some of the
substantive changes they want to see. So you put the achievable at the other at the top of the
agenda and push "fire the police chief to the bottom. When they make enough progress at the
top and middle of the agenda, they realize that you dont have to fire the police chief, if hell
abide by what youve agreed to up above on the agenda. So thats empowering, helping the
group understand the negotiation process.
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