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Introduction:
Sarah Cobb of the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
suggests that neither unmet needs nor scare resources fully account for the
underlying causes of conflict. In addition, we must attend to the history of the conflict
and its impact on people's lives.
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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 ???).
Conflict Stories
Sarah Cobb
Institute of Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University
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Most conflict theories come out of IR or social psychology
or behavioral economics. Those are fields that have tended to see conflicts
pre-existing in the way in which people describe the problems. There are
disciplines and traditions that are not based or do not have much affinity with
social constructionism. In those fields, those approaches to conflict presume
scarcity in terms of resources or even unmet needs. Neither scarce resources or
unmet needs attends to the way in which the story is coming from, its life
history, how it affects them, and how it affects other people. This is the
actual problem in addition to scarce resources and unmet needs. In other words,
you can't meet people's needs and anticipate the conflict is going to be
transformed. Neither can you reduce the scarcity of the resources or increase
the abundance and assume that the conflict is going to be resolved.
...
Narrative really has traditionally three or four parts. One would be the
context or the setting. Second is the character set-the folks that are involved.
The third is the values and moral themes and moral corollaries that are attached to the last plot. So the moral corollaries are a function of the way in which the plot and the characters populate and structure the narrative itself.
From that perspective, conflict narratives have particular features. They have
very, very skinny underdeveloped plots that are usually externalizing
responsibility. They have no evidence of interdependence, in terms of you did
that and so I did this. There's no circularity. Third, they have very, very
polarized and flat character traits with very little complexity. There are two
kinds of folks-good guys and bad guys. Usually everybody's unwilling to talk
about the ways in which their own participation as characters has not been
legitimate and again they externalize responsibility. They usually don't have
temporal complexity. They are either only about the past or only about the
future. Almost never are they about the past, present and future in very complex
ways. And the moral corollaries are very polarized and skinny. There's usually
one way to be good and one way to be bad. The sort of narrative facilitation
that I do is like adding water to a dehydrated narrative. How about that for a
metaphor? It gets more three-dimensional. Three-dimensional people learn and
there are new options and new ways of understanding things, and new dimensions
for relationships to evolve.
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