Beyond Intractability: A Free Knowledge Base on More Constructive Approaches to Destructive Conflict
Strategies and Tactics of Mediation
A good mediator uses many
strategies and tactics to help the parties reach agreement.
These include:
Ripeness-promoting
strategies: strategies to convince people that negotiation is
preferable to continued confrontation.
Convening
Processes: The
role of convening is to bring disputants to a preliminary meeting where they
will discuss the issues of a conflict and consider options for its resolution.
Tasks involved include assessing the conflict situation, identifying key
stakeholders and participants, introducing options for a resolution process, and
considering ground rules.
Conflict
Assessment: The
process of determining what is going on, who is involved, what options for
resolution might be possible, what procedural approaches might work.
Ground
Rules: Safe places
in communication also tend to be created and sustained when the ground rules of
the encounter are clearly set forth and agreed upon at the first meeting. Rules
such as no interrupting, giving every participant equal opportunities to speak,
and not pressuring individuals to speak who do not yet feel comfortable doing so
are some commonly used rules.
Codes of
Conduct for Intervenors: Just as ground rules set the codes of conduct for participants,
mediators also have codes of conduct. While
some are negotiated on a case-by-case basis, others are fairly standard and are
specified in various existing documents.
Sequencing
Strategies and Tactics: Mediators dealing with very large social conflicts have to
skillfully manage a very complex
and diverse set of challenges. In order to do that, these
people must think about the best way to order or sequence the issues involved in
their conflict. This essay describes some sequencing models and tactics.
Creating
Safe Spaces for Communication: Due to misunderstandings, distrust, and prejudice,
communication between parties is often difficult. This essay discusses various
obstacles to effective communication and explores how to create a supportive
climate in which parties feel comfortable discussing their differences.
Reframing:
Parties enter into mediation with their own interpretation of the problem: what
issues are in dispute, why the problem has arisen, and how best to resolve it.
One of the first things a mediator does is to get the parties to explain their
view of the problem so that each side sees how the other is framing the
conflict. The mediator then helps disputants to redefine the way they think
about the dispute and work toward a common definition of the problem.
Option
Identification:
Option identification is an essential step in the process of resolving any
conflict. Once all parties to the conflict have identified the issues under
contention, they should systematically list ALL options that they see available
to them for advancing their interests. Often this is the most creative step of
the mediation process.
Focusing
on Commonalities:
Working towards a solution often requires that parties both understand their
differences and yet focus on their commonalities. This essay outlines some
strategies for locating common ground.
Caucus:
Caucuses are meetings that mediators hold separately with each side of a dispute
in order to keep mediation moving forward. They can be called by the mediator or
by one of the parties to work out problems that occur during the process. This
essay outlines the basic steps of a caucus and their role in effective mediation
processes. It also discusses the downsides of caucusing.
Shuttle
Diplomacy: Rather
than allowing for the exchange of views and producing compromise,
direct communication between the parties may sometimes make the situation worse.
The essence of shuttle diplomacy is the use of a third party to convey
information back and forth between the parties in cases where direct
communication is likely to be counterproductive.
Reality
Testing: Sometimes
parties believe that they have an alternative or option that is better than what
they will get through participating in mediation. Reality testing involves
asking questions about each party's options and convincing resistant parties
that mediation is their best option.
Costing:
Cost-benefit analysis is a matter of analyzing the costs and benefits of
different options to determine what approach or solution to choose. Costing
occurs throughout the mediation process as parties decide whether or not to
participate and choose among settlement possibilities.
Action-Forcing
Mechanisms: These are mechanisms to get parties to move ahead when one or
more of the parties is stalling.
Establishing
Trust in Mediation:
One important task for mediators is to build and maintain the parties' trust of
the mediation process, the mediators, and between the parties themselves. When
trust levels are high, parties are less defensive and more willing to share
information with other parties at the mediation table and in private sessions
with the mediator.
The Beyond Intractability Knowledge Base Project Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess, Co-Directors and Editors c/o Conflict Information Consortium(Formerly Conflict Research Consortium), University of Colorado Campus Box 580, Boulder, CO 80309 Phone: (303) 492-1635; Fax: (303) 492-2154; Contact