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Howard Gadlin - Advice
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Introduction:
Howard Gadlin, Ombudsman at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) provides some advice for those new to the field.
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mediation
This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Advice
Howard Gadlin
Ombudsman, Center for Cooperative Resolution, National Institutes of Health
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what advice would you give to someone coming into
this field?
A: Someone coming into this field? For me, this is really the most
interesting work that I have ever done. I gave up a tenured academic position to
do this work and I just turned down one elsewhere. I think for me, and I don't mean
this to denigrate mediation, to me it is much more interesting than just
mediation, for two reasons. One is you have the latitude of
being more inventive in the kind of interventions you do, although there are
some mediators who I think are enormously creative in how the handle situations.
The other is because you have the responsibility and therefore the
opportunity to address systemic issues in organizations, mediators don't. I
mean, mediators within organizations they come in and they have problems that
are addressed to them and they have to address those conflicts one after the
other. Here it is a much broader responsibility, it is a real interesting kind
of work but I don't know how to translate that into advice. People are coming
around and asking about the work all of the time, but it is usually how can I
get into the field, because it is not always that easy to break in. Many
organizations will only select people from within the organization already.
It is only in the last several years that there has been more of a tendency
to recruit people from the outside, but that is happening. Even there, the
corporate world tends to be pretty insulated to select primarily people from the
corporate world, the academic worldÂ
. Well, it is getting a little bit better
that way.
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