Transforming Workplace and Organizational Conflicts: A Guide for Intermediaries
Beyond Intractability checklists offer users involved in various conflict situations lists of things to think about, along with links to sections of Beyond Intractability that relate to each item. Intermediaries working on workplace and organizational conflicts might want to consider the following questions.
- Identify Stakeholders
Have you identified all the stakeholders (or potential stakeholders) involved
in this conflict?
For more information about this topic, see: Parties to
Intractable Conflict, Disputants, Leaders,
Stakeholder
Representatives
- Clarify Goals
Are you clear about the parties' underlying goals
and interests?
For more information
about this topic, see: Setting
Goals, Interests, Integrative
or Interest-Based Bargaining, Distributive
Bargaining, Positional
Bargaining, Creating and
Claiming Value, Underlying
Causes of Intractable Conflict; Frames, Framing and
Reframing
- Determine the Conflict Stage
Is the conflict latent, developing,
or fully escalated? Has it become intractable? Is the conflict ripe for
resolution or do the parties involved feel it is in their best interest to
continue with the status quo or even escalate the conflict?
For more information about this topic, see: Conflict
Stages, Nature
of Intractability, Ripeness, Constructive Escalation
- History
Do you understand the history of this conflict including
the underlying issues that led to it?
For more information on this
topic, see:
Underlying Causes of Conflict, Unmet Human Needs, High-Stakes Distributional Issues
- Unrightable Wrongs
Does the conflict involve a history of
unrightable wrongs? Are you aware of options for transforming such
conflicts?
For more information on this topic, see: Transformation,
Apology
and Forgiveness, Trauma
Healing, Reconciliation
- Misunderstandings
Do you know how much of the conflict might be
attributable to misunderstandings? If not, do you know how to setup a communication
process that might be able to answer this question? And, do
you know how to setup a communication process that might limit these
misunderstandings?
For more information on this topic, see: Misunderstandings,
Channels
of Communication, In-Depth
Communication, Cross-Cultural
Communication, Interpersonal
- Small-Scale Communication
- Emotional and Psychological Dimensions
Do you know to what extent the
parties' responses are due to emotional and psychological dimensions such as
anger, fear or prejudice? Do you know what is causing these reactions and how
to defuse them?
For more information on this topic, see:
Psychological Dynamics,
Ethos of Conflict
, Prejudice, Anger, Fear,
Distrust,
Guilt and Shame,
Humiliation,
Face
- Fact-Finding
Do you know how much of the conflict is
attributable to disagreements regarding the basic facts? If not, do you know
how to setup communication processes that might be able to answer this
question? And, do you know how to setup joint fact-finding processes that
might limit factual disagreements?
For more information on this
topic, see: Fact-Finding,
Factual
Disputes, Uncertainty,
Obtaining
Trustworthy Information, Distinguishing
Facts from Values
- Escalation
Do you know how much of the conflict is attributable
to escalation and polarization? Have you developed and implemented effective
steps to limit or reverse this effect?
For more information on this
topic, see: Escalation, Constructive
Escalation, Polarization,
Limiting
Escalation - De-escalation
- Coalition Building / Conflict Minimization
For each of the
various stakeholders likely to be involved in the conflict, have you
considered ways of reducing opposition to their efforts while simultaneously
strengthening their networks of allies and supporters?
For more
information on this topic, see: Coalition
Building, Empowerment,
Power
Inequities
- Intervention Options
Are you familiar with the different options
for intervening in an interpersonal conflict?
For more information
on this topic, see: Intervention
Processes-Overview, Mediation, Consensus
Building, Policy
Dialogue, Arbitration,
Adjudication, Hybrid Processes
- Culture and Conflict
Are cultural misunderstandings contributing
to the conflict? Are there differences between the parties in things like
nationality, language, gender or age? Do you know some strategies for
overcoming cultural differences?
For more information about this
topic, see: Culture and Conflict, Culture-Based
Negotiation Styles, Cross-Cultural
Communication , Communication
Tools for Understanding Cultural
Differences, Women in
Intractable Conflict
- Persuasion
Do you have a strategy for explaining the
stakeholders' goals and actions to each other? For persuading them that the
other stakeholders' goals are reasonable and equitable?
For more
information on this topic, see: Channels
of Communication, In-Depth
Communication, Persuasion, Reframing
- Trust
Have you been able to help the parties build trust with
each other?
For more information on this topic, see: Trust and
Trust Building, Managing
Interpersonal Trust and Distrust, Limiting
Escalation - De-escalation, Humanization
of Extremists
- Power / BATNAs
Are you clear about the nature of power and how
it affects the parties' alternatives to a negotiated agreement? Are you
clear about the powers available to other stakeholders? Have you been able to
demonstrate to people the powers that the parties are willing to use to defend
their interests? (Here you should consider legal, political, and economic
power as well as the ability to resist violent assaults.)
For more
information on this topic, see: Best Alternative to a
Negotiated Agreement (BATNA), Understanding
Power, Coercive Power,
Exchange
Power, Integrative
Power, Nonviolence,
Power
Inequities, Empowerment
- Violence
If the conflict becomes violent, do you have a strategy
for de-escalating the violence? Is it possible for you to prevent the violence
or is there anything you can do to decrease the suffering caused by
it?
For more information on this topic, see: Interpersonal
Conflict and Violence, Violence
- Dispute Systems Design
Do you expect a continuing series of
similar disputes? Do you know about options for developing a system for the
handling of routine disputes?
For more information on this topic, see: Designing
New Dispute Resolution Systems
- The Future
Have you envisioned a more constructive way of
dealing with this conflict in the future?
For more information on
this topic, see: Envisioning
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