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Wikipedia

Conflict resolution

Conflict resolution is conceptualized as the methods and processes involved in facilitating the peaceful ending of conflict and retribution. Committed group members attempt to resolve group conflicts by actively communicating information about their conflicting motives or ideologies to the rest of group (e.g., intentions; reasons for holding certain beliefs) and by engaging in collective negotiation.[1] Dimensions of resolution typically parallel the dimensions of conflict in the way the conflict is processed. Cognitive resolution is the way disputants understand and view the conflict, with beliefs, perspectives, understandings and attitudes. Emotional resolution is in the way disputants feel about a conflict, the emotional energy. Behavioral resolution is reflective of how the disputants act, their behavior.[2] Ultimately a wide range of methods and procedures for addressing conflict exist, including negotiation, mediation, mediation-arbitration,[3] diplomacy, and creative peacebuilding.[4][5]

The term conflict resolution may also be used interchangeably with dispute resolution, where arbitration and litigation processes are critically involved. The concept of conflict resolution can be thought to encompass the use of nonviolent resistance measures by conflicted parties in an attempt to promote effective resolution.[6]

Theories and models edit

There are a plethora of different theories and models linked to the concept of conflict resolution. A few of them are described below.

Conflict resolution curve edit

There are many examples of conflict resolution in history, and there has been a debate about the ways to conflict resolution: whether it should be forced or peaceful. Conflict resolution by peaceful means is generally perceived to be a better option. The conflict resolution curve derived from an analytical model that offers a peaceful solution by motivating conflicting entities.[7] Forced resolution of conflict might invoke another conflict in the future.

Conflict resolution curve (CRC) separates conflict styles into two separate domains: domain of competing entities and domain of accommodating entities. There is a sort of agreement between targets and aggressors on this curve. Their judgements of badness compared to goodness of each other are analogous on CRC. So, arrival of conflicting entities to some negotiable points on CRC is important before peace building. CRC does not exist (i.e., singular) in reality if the aggression of the aggressor is certain. Under such circumstances it might lead to apocalypse with mutual destruction.[8]

The curve explains why nonviolent struggles ultimately toppled repressive regimes and sometimes forced leaders to change the nature of governance. Also, this methodology has been applied to capture conflict styles on the Korean Peninsula and dynamics of negotiation processes.[9]

Dual concern model edit

The dual concern model of conflict resolution is a conceptual perspective that assumes individuals' preferred method of dealing with conflict is based on two underlying themes or dimensions: concern for self (assertiveness) and concern for others (empathy).[1]

According to the model, group members balance their concern for satisfying personal needs and interests with their concern for satisfying the needs and interests of others in different ways. The intersection of these two dimensions ultimately leads individuals towards exhibiting different styles of conflict resolution.[10] The dual model identifies five conflict resolution styles or strategies that individuals may use depending on their dispositions toward pro-self or pro-social goals.

Avoidance conflict style

Characterized by joking, changing or avoiding the topic, or even denying that a problem exists, the conflict avoidance style is used when an individual has withdrawn in dealing with the other party, when one is uncomfortable with conflict, or due to cultural contexts.[nb 1] During conflict, these avoiders adopt a "wait and see" attitude, often allowing conflict to phase out on its own without any personal involvement.[11] By neglecting to address high-conflict situations, avoiders risk allowing problems to fester or spin out of control.

Accommodating conflict style

In contrast, yielding, "accommodating", smoothing or suppression conflict styles are characterized by a high level of concern for others and a low level of concern for oneself. This passive pro-social approach emerges when individuals derive personal satisfaction from meeting the needs of others and have a general concern for maintaining stable, positive social relationships.[1] When faced with conflict, individuals with an accommodating conflict style tend to harmonize into others' demands out of respect for the social relationship. With this sense of yielding to the conflict, individuals fall back to others' input instead of finding solutions with their own intellectual resolution.[12]

Competitive conflict style

The competitive, "fighting" or forcing conflict style maximizes individual assertiveness (i.e., concern for self) and minimizes empathy (i.e., concern for others). Groups consisting of competitive members generally enjoy seeking domination over others, and typically see conflict as a "win or lose" predicament.[1] Fighters tend to force others to accept their personal views by employing competitive power tactics (arguments, insults, accusations or even violence) that foster intimidation.[13]

Conciliation conflict style

The conciliation, "compromising", bargaining or negotiation conflict style is typical of individuals who possess an intermediate level of concern for both personal and others' outcomes. Compromisers value fairness and, in doing so, anticipate mutual give-and-take interactions.[11] By accepting some demands put forth by others, compromisers believe this agreeableness will encourage others to meet them halfway, thus promoting conflict resolution.[14] This conflict style can be considered an extension of both "yielding" and "cooperative" strategies.[1]

Cooperation conflict style

Characterized by an active concern for both pro-social and pro-self behavior, the cooperation, integration, confrontation or problem-solving conflict style is typically used when an individual has elevated interests in their own outcomes as well as in the outcomes of others. During conflict, cooperators collaborate with others in an effort to find an amicable solution that satisfies all parties involved in the conflict. Individuals using this type of conflict style tend to be both highly assertive and highly empathetic.[11] By seeing conflict as a creative opportunity, collaborators willingly invest time and resources into finding a "win-win" solution.[1] According to the literature on conflict resolution, a cooperative conflict resolution style is recommended above all others. This resolution may be achieved by lowering the aggressor's guard while raising the ego.[15][16]

Relational dialectics theory edit

Relational dialectics theory (RDT), introduced by Leslie Baxter and Barbara Matgomery (1988),[17][18] explores the ways in which people in relationships use verbal communication to manage conflict and contradiction as opposed to psychology. This concept focuses on maintaining a relationship even through contradictions that arise and how relationships are managed through coordinated talk. RDT assumes that relationships are composed of opposing tendencies, are constantly changing, and tensions arises from intimate relationships.

The main concepts of RDT are:

  • Contradictions – The concept is that the contrary has the characteristics of its opposite. People can seek to be in a relationship but still need their space.
  • Totality – The totality comes when the opposites unite. Thus, the relationship is balanced with contradictions and only then it reaches totality
  • Process – Comprehended through various social processes. These processes simultaneously continue within a relationship in a recurring manner.
  • Praxis – The relationship progresses with experience and both people interact and communicate effectively to meet their needs. Praxis is a concept of practicability in making decisions in a relationship despite opposing wants and needs

Strategy of conflict edit

Strategy of conflict, by Thomas Schelling, is the study of negotiation during conflict and strategic behavior that results in the development of "conflict behavior". This idea is based largely on game theory. In "A Reorientation of Game Theory", Schelling discusses ways in which one can redirect the focus of a conflict in order to gain advantage over an opponent.

  • Conflict is a contest. Rational behavior, in this contest, is a matter of judgment and perception.
  • Strategy makes predictions using "rational behavior – behavior motivated by a serious calculation of advantages, a calculation that in turn is based on an explicit and internally consistent value system".
  • Cooperation is always temporary, interests will change.

Conflict resolution in peace and conflict studies edit

Definition edit

Within peace and conflict studies a definition of conflict resolution is presented in Peter Wallensteen's book Understanding Conflict Resolution:

Conflict resolution is a social situation where the armed conflicting parties in a (voluntarily) agreement resolve to live peacefully with – and/or dissolve – their basic incompatibilities and henceforth cease to use arms against one another.[19]

The "conflicting parties" concerned in this definition are formally or informally organized groups engaged in intrastate or interstate conflict.[20][21][22][23] 'Basic incompatibility' refers to a severe disagreement between at least two sides where their demands cannot be met by the same resources at the same time.[24]

Mechanisms edit

One theory discussed within the field of peace and conflict studies is conflict resolution mechanisms: independent procedures in which the conflicting parties can have confidence. They can be formal or informal arrangements with the intention of resolving the conflict.[25] In Understanding Conflict Resolution Wallensteen draws from the works of Lewis A. Coser, Johan Galtung and Thomas Schelling, and presents seven distinct theoretical mechanisms for conflict resolutions:[26]

  1. A shift in priorities for one of the conflicting parties. While it is rare that a party completely changes its basic positions, it can display a shift in to what it gives highest priority. In such an instance new possibilities for conflict resolutions may arise.
  2. The contested resource is divided. In essence, this means both conflicting parties display some extent of shift in priorities which then opens up for some form of "meeting the other side halfway" agreement.
  3. Horse-trading between the conflicting parties. This means that one side gets all of its demands met on one issue, while the other side gets all of its demands met on another issue.
  4. The parties decide to share control, and rule together over the contested resource. It could be permanent, or a temporary arrangement for a transition period that, when over, has led to a transcendence of the conflict.
  5. The parties agree to leave control to someone else. In this mechanism the primary parties agree, or accept, that a third party takes control over the contested resource.
  6. The parties resort to conflict resolution mechanisms, notably arbitration or other legal procedures. This means finding a procedure for resolving the conflict through some of the previously mentioned five ways, but with the added quality that it is done through a process outside of the parties' immediate control.
  7. Some issues can be left for later. The argument for this is that political conditions and popular attitudes can change, and some issues can gain from being delayed, as their significance may pale with time.

Intrastate and interstate edit

 
Moshe Dayan and Abdullah el Tell reach a ceasefire agreement during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War in Jerusalem on 30 November 1948

According to conflict database Uppsala Conflict Data Program's definition war may occur between parties who contest an incompatibility. The nature of an incompatibility can be territorial or governmental, but a warring party must be a "government of a state or any opposition organization or alliance of organizations that uses armed force to promote its position in the incompatibility in an intrastate or an interstate armed conflict".[27] Wars can conclude with a peace agreement, which is a "formal agreement... which addresses the disputed incompatibility, either by settling all or part of it, or by clearly outlining a process for how [...] to regulate the incompatibility."[28] A ceasefire is another form of agreement made by warring parties; unlike a peace agreement, it only "regulates the conflict behaviour of warring parties", and does not resolve the issue that brought the parties to war in the first place.[29]

Peacekeeping measures may be deployed to avoid violence in solving such incompatibilities.[30] Beginning in the last century, political theorists have been developing the theory of a global peace system that relies upon broad social and political measures to avoid war in the interest of achieving world peace.[31] The Blue Peace approach developed by Strategic Foresight Group facilitates cooperation between countries over shared water resources, thus reducing the risk of war and enabling sustainable development.[32]

Conflict resolution is an expanding field of professional practice, both in the U.S. and around the world. The escalating costs of conflict have increased use of third parties who may serve as a conflict specialists to resolve conflicts. In fact, relief and development organizations have added peace-building specialists to their teams.[33] Many major international non-governmental organizations have seen a growing need to hire practitioners trained in conflict analysis and resolution. Furthermore, this expansion has resulted in the need for conflict resolution practitioners to work in a variety of settings such as in businesses, court systems, government agencies, nonprofit organizations, and educational institutions throughout the world.

In the workplace edit

According to the Cambridge dictionary, a basic definition of conflict is: "an active disagreement between people with opposing opinions or principles."[34] Conflicts such as disagreements may occur at any moment, being a normal part of human interactions. The type of conflict and its severity may vary both in content and degree of seriousness; however, it is impossible to completely avoid it. Actually, conflict in itself is not necessarily a negative thing. When handled constructively it can help people to stand up for themselves and others, to evolve and learn how to work together to achieve a mutually satisfactory solution. But if conflict is handled poorly it can cause anger, hurt, divisiveness and more serious problems.

If it is impossible to completely avoid conflict as it was said, the possibilities to experience it are usually higher particularly in complex social contexts in which important diversities are at stake. Specially because of this reason, speaking about conflict resolution becomes fundamental in ethnically diverse and multicultural work environments, in which not only "regular" work disagreements may occur but in which also different languages, worldviews, lifestyles and ultimately value differences may diverge.

Conflict resolution is the process by which two or more parties engaged in a disagreement, dispute or debate reach an agreement resolving it.[35] It involves a series of stages, involved actors, models and approaches that may depend on the kind of confrontation at stake and the surrounded social and cultural context. However, there are some general actions and personal skills that may be very useful when facing a conflict to solve (independently of its nature), e.g. an open minded orientation able to analyze the different point of views and perspectives involved, as well as an ability to empathize, carefully listen and clearly communicate with all the parts involved. Sources of conflict may be so many, depending on the particular situation and the specific context, but some of the most common include:

Personal differences such as values, ethics, personalities, age, education, gender, socioeconomic status, cultural background, temperament, health, religion, political beliefs, etc. Thus, almost any social category that serves to differentiate people may become an object of conflict when it does negatively diverge with people who do not share it.[36] Clashes of ideas, choices or actions. Conflict occurs when people does not share common goals, or common ways to reach a particular objective (e.g. different work styles). Conflict occurs also when there is direct or indirect competition between people or when someone may feel excluded from a particular activity or by some people within the company. Lack of communication or poor communication are also significant reasons to start a conflict, to misunderstand a particular situation and to create potentially explosive interactions.[37]

Fundamental strategies edit

Although different conflicts may require different ways to handle them, this is a list of fundamental strategies that may be implemented when handling a conflictive situation:[38]

  1. Reaching agreement on rules and procedures: Establishing ground rules may include the following actions: a. Determining a site for the meeting; b. Setting a formal agenda; c. Determining who attends; d. Setting time limits; e. Setting procedural rules; f. Following specific "do(s) and don't(s)".
  2. Reducing tension and synchronizing the de-escalation of hostility: In highly emotional situations when people feel angry, upset, frustrated, it is important to implement the following actions: a. Separating the involved parties; b. Managing tensions – jokes as an instrument to give the opportunity for catharsis; c. Acknowledging others' feelings – actively listening to others; d. De-escalation by public statements by parties – about the concession, the commitments of the parties.
  3. Improving the accuracy of communication, particularly improving each party's understanding of the other's perception: a. Accurate understanding of the other's position; b. Role reversal, trying to adopt the other's position (empathetic attitudes); c. Imaging – describing how they see themselves, how the other parties appears to them, how they think the other parties will describe them and how the others see themselves.
  4. Controlling the number and size of issues in the discussion: a. Fractionate the negotiation – a method that divides a large conflict into smaller parts: 1. Reduce the number of parties on each side; 2. Control the number of substantive issues; 3. Search for different ways to divide big issues.
  5. Establishing common ground where parties can find a basis for agreement: a. Establishing common goals or superordinate goals; b. Establishing common enemies; c. Identifying common expectations; d. Managing time constraints and deadlines; e. Reframing the parties' view of each other; f. Build trust through the negotiation process.
  6. Enhancing the desirability of the options and alternatives that each party presents to the other: a. Giving the other party an acceptable proposal; b. Asking for a different decision; c. Sweeten the other rather than intensifying the threat; d. Elaborating objective or legitimate criteria to evaluate all possible solutions.[39]

Approaches edit

A conflict is a common phenomenon in the workplace; as mentioned before, it can occur because of the most different grounds of diversity and under very different circumstances. However, it is usually a matter of interests, needs, priorities, goals or values interfering with each other; and, often, a result of different perceptions more than actual differences. Conflicts may involve team members, departments, projects, organization and client, boss and subordinate, organization needs vs. personal needs, and they are usually immersed in complex relations of power that need to be understood and interpreted in order to define the more tailored way to manage the conflict. There are, nevertheless, some main approaches that may be applied when trying to solve a conflict that may lead to very different outcomes to be valued according to the particular situation and the available negotiation resources:

Forcing edit

When one of the conflict's parts firmly pursues his or her own concerns despite the resistance of the other(s). This may involve pushing one viewpoint at the expense of another or maintaining firm resistance to the counterpart's actions; it is also commonly known as "competing". Forcing may be appropriate when all other, less forceful methods, do not work or are ineffective; when someone needs to stand up for his/her own rights (or the represented group/organization's rights), resist aggression and pressure. It may be also considered a suitable option when a quick resolution is required and using force is justified (e.g. in a life-threatening situation, to stop an aggression), and as a very last resort to resolve a long-lasting conflict.

However, forcing may also negatively affect the relationship with the opponent in the long run; may intensified the conflict if the opponent decides to react in the same way (even if it was not the original intention); it does not allow to take advantage in a productive way of the other side's position and, last but not least, taking this approach may require a lot of energy and be exhausting to some individuals.

Win-win / collaborating edit

Collaboration involves an attempt to work with the other part involved in the conflict to find a win-win solution to the problem in hand, or at least to find a solution that most satisfies the concerns of both parties. The win-win approach sees conflict resolution as an opportunity to come to a mutually beneficial result; and it includes identifying the underlying concerns of the opponents and finding an alternative which meets each party's concerns. From that point of view, it is the most desirable outcome when trying to solve a problem for all partners.

Collaborating may be the best solution when consensus and commitment of other parties is important; when the conflict occurs in a collaborative, trustworthy environment and when it is required to address the interests of multiple stakeholders. But more specially, it is the most desirable outcome when a long-term relationship is important so that people can continue to collaborate in a productive way; collaborating is in few words, sharing responsibilities and mutual commitment. For parties involved, the outcome of the conflict resolution is less stressful; however, the process of finding and establishing a win-win solution may be longer and should be very involving.

It may require more effort and more time than some other methods; for the same reason, collaborating may not be practical when timing is crucial and a quick solution or fast response is required.

Compromising edit

Different from the win-win solution, in this outcome the conflict parties find a mutually acceptable solution which partially satisfies both parties. This can occur as both parties converse with one another and seek to understand the other's point of view.[40] Compromising may be an optimal solution when the goals are moderately important and not worth the use of more assertive or more involving approaches. It may be useful when reaching temporary settlement on complex issues and as a first step when the involved parties do not know each other well or have not yet developed a high level of mutual trust. Compromising may be a faster way to solve things when time is a factor. The level of tensions can be lower as well, but the result of the conflict may be also less satisfactory.

If this method is not well managed, and the factor time becomes the most important one, the situation may result in both parties being not satisfied with the outcome (i.e. a lose-lose situation). Moreover, it does not contribute to building trust in the long run and it may require a closer monitoring of the kind of partially satisfactory compromises acquired.

Withdrawing edit

This technique consists on not addressing the conflict, postpone it or simply withdrawing; for that reason, it is also known as Avoiding. This outcome is suitable when the issue is trivial and not worth the effort or when more important issues are pressing, and one or both the parties do not have time to deal with it. Withdrawing may be also a strategic response when it is not the right time or place to confront the issue, when more time is needed to think and collect information before acting or when not responding may bring still some winnings for at least some of the involves parties. Moreover, withdrawing may be also employed when someone know that the other party is totally engaged with hostility and does not want (can not) to invest further unreasonable efforts.

Withdrawing may give the possibility to see things from a different perspective while gaining time and collecting further information, and specially is a low stress approach particularly when the conflict is a short time one. However, not acting may be interpreted as an agreement and therefore it may lead to weakening or losing a previously gained position with one or more parties involved. Furthermore, when using withdrawing as a strategy more time, skills and experiences together with other actions may need to be implemented.

Smoothing edit

Smoothing is accommodating the concerns of others first of all, rather than one's own concerns. This kind of strategy may be applied when the issue of the conflict is much more important for the counterparts whereas for the other is not particularly relevant. It may be also applied when someone accepts that he/she is wrong and furthermore there are no other possible options than continuing an unworthy competing-pushing situation. Just as withdrawing, smoothing may be an option to find at least a temporal solution or obtain more time and information, however, it is not an option when priority interests are at stake.

There is a high risk of being abused when choosing the smoothing option. Therefore, it is important to keep the right balance and to not give up one own interests and necessities. Otherwise, confidence in one's ability, mainly with an aggressive opponent, may be seriously damaged, together with credibility by the other parties involved. Needed to say, in these cases a transition to a Win-Win solution in the future becomes particularly more difficult when someone.

Between organizations edit

Relationships between organizations, such as strategic alliances, buyer-supplier partnerships, organizational networks, or joint ventures are prone to conflict. Conflict resolution in inter-organizational relationships has attracted the attention of business and management scholars. They have related the forms of conflict (e.g., integrity-based vs. competence-based conflict) to the mode of conflict resolution[41] and the negotiation and repair approaches used by organizations. They have also observed the role of important moderating factors such as the type of contractual arrangement,[42] the level of trust between organizations,[43] or the type of power asymmetry.[44]

Other forms edit

Conflict management edit

Conflict management refers to the long-term management of intractable conflicts. It is the label for the variety of ways by which people handle grievances—standing up for what they consider to be right and against what they consider to be wrong. Those ways include such diverse phenomena as gossip, ridicule, lynching, terrorism, warfare, feuding, genocide, law, mediation, and avoidance.[45] Which forms of conflict management will be used in any given situation can be somewhat predicted and explained by the social structure—or social geometry—of the case.

Conflict management is often considered to be distinct from conflict resolution. In order for actual conflict to occur, there should be an expression of exclusive patterns which explain why and how the conflict was expressed the way it was. Conflict is often connected to a previous issue. Resolution refers to resolving a dispute to the approval of one or both parties, whereas management is concerned with an ongoing process that may never have a resolution. Neither is considered the same as conflict transformation, which seeks to reframe the positions of the conflict parties.

Counseling edit

When personal conflict leads to frustration and loss of efficiency, counseling may prove helpful. Although few organizations can afford to have professional counselors on staff, given some training, managers may be able to perform this function. Nondirective counseling, or "listening with understanding", is little more than being a good listener—something often considered to be important in a manager.[46]

Sometimes simply being able to express one's feelings to a concerned and understanding listener is enough to relieve frustration and make it possible for an individual to advance to a problem-solving frame of mind. The nondirective approach is one effective way for managers to deal with frustrated subordinates and coworkers.[47]

There are other, more direct and more diagnostic, methods that could be used in appropriate circumstances. However, the great strength of the nondirective approach[nb 2] lies in its simplicity, its effectiveness, and that it deliberately avoids the manager-counselor's diagnosing and interpreting emotional problems, which would call for special psychological training. Listening to staff with sympathy and understanding is unlikely to escalate the problem, and is a widely used approach for helping people cope with problems that interfere with their effectiveness in the workplace.[47]

Culture-based edit

 
The Reconciliation of Jacob and Esau (illustration from a Bible card published 1907 by the Providence Lithograph Company)

Conflict resolution as both a professional practice and academic field is highly sensitive to cultural practices. In Western cultural contexts, such as Canada and the United States, successful conflict resolution usually involves fostering communication among disputants, problem solving, and drafting agreements that meet underlying needs. In these situations, conflict resolvers often talk about finding a mutually satisfying ("win-win") solution for everyone involved.[48]

In many non-Western cultural contexts, such as Afghanistan, Vietnam, and China, it is also important to find "win-win" solutions; however, the routes taken to find them may be very different. In these contexts, direct communication between disputants that explicitly addresses the issues at stake in the conflict can be perceived as very rude, making the conflict worse and delaying resolution. It can make sense to involve religious, tribal, or community leaders; communicate difficult truths through a third party; or make suggestions through stories.[49] Intercultural conflicts are often the most difficult to resolve because the expectations of the disputants can be very different, and there is much occasion for misunderstanding.[50]

In animals edit

Conflict resolution has also been studied in non-humans, including dogs, cats, monkeys, snakes, elephants, and primates.[51] Aggression is more common among relatives and within a group than between groups. Instead of creating distance between the individuals, primates tend to be more intimate in the period after an aggressive incident. These intimacies consist of grooming and various forms of body contact. Stress responses, including increased heart rates, usually decrease after these reconciliatory signals. Different types of primates, as well as many other species who live in groups, display different types of conciliatory behavior. Resolving conflicts that threaten the interaction between individuals in a group is necessary for survival, giving it a strong evolutionary value. A further focus of this is among species that have stable social units, individual relationships, and the potential for intragroup aggression that may disrupt beneficial relationships. The role of these reunions in negotiating relationships is examined along with the susceptibility of these relationships to partner value asymmetries and biological market effects.[52] These findings contradict previous existing theories about the general function of aggression, i.e. creating space between individuals (first proposed by Konrad Lorenz), which seems to be more the case in conflicts between groups than it is within groups.

In addition to research in primates, biologists are beginning to explore reconciliation in other animals. Until recently, the literature dealing with reconciliation in non-primates has consisted of anecdotal observations and very little quantitative data. Although peaceful post-conflict behavior had been documented going back to the 1960s, it was not until 1993 that Rowell made the first explicit mention of reconciliation in feral sheep. Reconciliation has since been documented in spotted hyenas,[53][54] lions, bottlenose dolphins,[55] dwarf mongoose, domestic goats,[56] domestic dogs,[57] and, recently, in red-necked wallabies.[58]

Education edit

Universities worldwide offer programs of study pertaining to conflict research, analysis, and practice. Conrad Grebel University College at the University of Waterloo has the oldest-running peace and conflict studies (PACS) program in Canada.[59] PACS can be taken as an Honors, 4-year general, or 3-year general major, joint major, minor, and diploma. Grebel also offers an interdisciplinary Master of Peace and Conflict Studies professional program. The Cornell University ILR School houses the Scheinman Institute on Conflict Resolution, which offers undergraduate, graduate, and professional training on conflict resolution.[60] It also offers dispute resolution concentrations for its MILR, JD/MILR, MPS, and MS/PhD graduate degree programs.[61] At the graduate level, Eastern Mennonite University's Center for Justice and Peacebuilding offers a Master of Arts in Conflict Transformation, a dual Master of Divinity/MA in Conflict Transformation degree, and several graduate certificates.[62] EMU also offers an accelerated 5-year BA in Peacebuilding and Development/MA in Conflict Transformation. Additional graduate programs are offered at Columbia University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, Creighton University, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and Trinity College Dublin.[63] George Mason University's Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution offers BA, BS, MS, and PhD degrees in Conflict Analysis and Resolution, as well as an undergraduate minor, graduate certificates, and joint degree programs.[64] Nova Southeastern University also offers a PhD in Conflict Analysis & Resolution, in both online and on-campus formats.[65]

Conflict resolution is a growing area of interest in UK pedagogy, with teachers and students both encouraged to learn about mechanisms that lead to aggressive action and those that lead to peaceful resolution. The University of Law, one of the oldest common law training institutions in the world, offers a legal-focused master's degree in conflict resolution as an LL.M. (Conflict resolution).[66]

Tel Aviv University offers two graduate degree programs in the field of conflict resolution, including the English-language International Program in Conflict Resolution and Mediation, allowing students to learn in a geographic region which is the subject of much research on international conflict resolution.

The Nelson Mandela Center for Peace & Conflict Resolution at Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi, is one of the first centers for peace and conflict resolution to be established at an Indian university. It offers a two-year full-time MA course in Conflict Analysis and Peace-Building, as well as a PhD in Conflict and Peace Studies.[67]

In Sweden Linnaeus University, Lund University and Uppsala University offer programs on bachelor, master and/or doctoral level in Peace and Conflict Studies.[68][69][70] Uppsala University also hosts its own Department of Peace and Conflict Research, among other things occupied with running the conflict database UCDP (Uppsala Conflict Data Program).[70][71]

See also edit

Organizations edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ For example, in Chinese culture, reasons for avoidance include sustaining a good mood, protecting the avoider, and other philosophical and spiritual reasonings (Feng and Wilson 2011).[full citation needed]
  2. ^ Nondirective counseling is based on the client-centered therapy of Carl Rogers.

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • Augsburger, D. (1992). Conflict mediation across cultures. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster / John Knox Press.
  • Bannon, I. & Paul Collier (Eds.). (2003). Natural resources and violent conflict: Options and actions. Washington, D.C: The World Bank.
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  • Wilmot, W. & Jouyce Hocker. (2007). Interpersonal conflict. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Companies.
  • Bercovitch, Jacob and Jackson, Richard. 2009. Conflict Resolution in the Twenty-first Century: Principles, Methods, and Approaches. 8 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.
  • de Waal, Frans B. M. and Angeline van Roosmalen. 1979. Reconciliation and consolation among chimpanzees. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 5: 55–66.
  • de Waal, Frans B. M. 1989. Peacemaking Among Primates. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
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  • Veenema, Hans; et al. (1994). "Methodological improvements for the study of reconciliation". Behavioural Processes. 31 (1): 29–38. doi:10.1016/0376-6357(94)90035-3. PMID 24897415. S2CID 25126127.
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  • Castles, Duncan L.; Whiten, Andrew (1998). "Post-conflict behaviour of wild olive baboons, I. Reconciliation, redirection, and consolation". Ethology. 104 (2): 126–147. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.1998.tb00057.x.
  • Aureli, Filippo and Frans B. M. de Waal, eds. 2000. Natural Conflict Resolution. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
  • de Waal, Frans B. M. 2000. Primates––A natural heritage of conflict resolution. Science 289: 586–590.
  • Hicks, Donna. 2011. Dignity: The Essential Role It Plays in Resolving Conflict. Yale University Press
  • Silk, Joan B. (2002). "The form and function of reconciliation in primates". Annual Review of Anthropology. 31: 21–44. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.31.032902.101743.
  • Weaver, Ann; de Waal, Frans B. M. (2003). "The mother-offspring relationship as a template in social development: reconciliation in captive brown capuchins (Cebus apella)". Journal of Comparative Psychology. 117 (1): 101–110. doi:10.1037/0735-7036.117.1.101. PMID 12735370. S2CID 9632420.
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Further reading edit

conflict, resolution, other, uses, disambiguation, conflict, resolution, between, editors, wikipedia, wikipedia, dispute, resolution, conceptualized, methods, processes, involved, facilitating, peaceful, ending, conflict, retribution, committed, group, members. For other uses see Conflict resolution disambiguation For conflict resolution between editors of Wikipedia see Wikipedia Dispute resolution Conflict resolution is conceptualized as the methods and processes involved in facilitating the peaceful ending of conflict and retribution Committed group members attempt to resolve group conflicts by actively communicating information about their conflicting motives or ideologies to the rest of group e g intentions reasons for holding certain beliefs and by engaging in collective negotiation 1 Dimensions of resolution typically parallel the dimensions of conflict in the way the conflict is processed Cognitive resolution is the way disputants understand and view the conflict with beliefs perspectives understandings and attitudes Emotional resolution is in the way disputants feel about a conflict the emotional energy Behavioral resolution is reflective of how the disputants act their behavior 2 Ultimately a wide range of methods and procedures for addressing conflict exist including negotiation mediation mediation arbitration 3 diplomacy and creative peacebuilding 4 5 The term conflict resolution may also be used interchangeably with dispute resolution where arbitration and litigation processes are critically involved The concept of conflict resolution can be thought to encompass the use of nonviolent resistance measures by conflicted parties in an attempt to promote effective resolution 6 Contents 1 Theories and models 1 1 Conflict resolution curve 1 2 Dual concern model 1 3 Relational dialectics theory 1 4 Strategy of conflict 2 Conflict resolution in peace and conflict studies 2 1 Definition 2 2 Mechanisms 3 Intrastate and interstate 4 In the workplace 4 1 Fundamental strategies 4 2 Approaches 4 2 1 Forcing 4 2 2 Win win collaborating 4 2 3 Compromising 4 2 4 Withdrawing 4 2 5 Smoothing 5 Between organizations 6 Other forms 6 1 Conflict management 6 2 Counseling 7 Culture based 8 In animals 9 Education 10 See also 10 1 Organizations 11 Footnotes 12 References 13 Works cited 14 Further readingTheories and models editThere are a plethora of different theories and models linked to the concept of conflict resolution A few of them are described below Conflict resolution curve edit There are many examples of conflict resolution in history and there has been a debate about the ways to conflict resolution whether it should be forced or peaceful Conflict resolution by peaceful means is generally perceived to be a better option The conflict resolution curve derived from an analytical model that offers a peaceful solution by motivating conflicting entities 7 Forced resolution of conflict might invoke another conflict in the future Conflict resolution curve CRC separates conflict styles into two separate domains domain of competing entities and domain of accommodating entities There is a sort of agreement between targets and aggressors on this curve Their judgements of badness compared to goodness of each other are analogous on CRC So arrival of conflicting entities to some negotiable points on CRC is important before peace building CRC does not exist i e singular in reality if the aggression of the aggressor is certain Under such circumstances it might lead to apocalypse with mutual destruction 8 The curve explains why nonviolent struggles ultimately toppled repressive regimes and sometimes forced leaders to change the nature of governance Also this methodology has been applied to capture conflict styles on the Korean Peninsula and dynamics of negotiation processes 9 Dual concern model edit The dual concern model of conflict resolution is a conceptual perspective that assumes individuals preferred method of dealing with conflict is based on two underlying themes or dimensions concern for self assertiveness and concern for others empathy 1 According to the model group members balance their concern for satisfying personal needs and interests with their concern for satisfying the needs and interests of others in different ways The intersection of these two dimensions ultimately leads individuals towards exhibiting different styles of conflict resolution 10 The dual model identifies five conflict resolution styles or strategies that individuals may use depending on their dispositions toward pro self or pro social goals Avoidance conflict style Characterized by joking changing or avoiding the topic or even denying that a problem exists the conflict avoidance style is used when an individual has withdrawn in dealing with the other party when one is uncomfortable with conflict or due to cultural contexts nb 1 During conflict these avoiders adopt a wait and see attitude often allowing conflict to phase out on its own without any personal involvement 11 By neglecting to address high conflict situations avoiders risk allowing problems to fester or spin out of control Accommodating conflict style In contrast yielding accommodating smoothing or suppression conflict styles are characterized by a high level of concern for others and a low level of concern for oneself This passive pro social approach emerges when individuals derive personal satisfaction from meeting the needs of others and have a general concern for maintaining stable positive social relationships 1 When faced with conflict individuals with an accommodating conflict style tend to harmonize into others demands out of respect for the social relationship With this sense of yielding to the conflict individuals fall back to others input instead of finding solutions with their own intellectual resolution 12 Competitive conflict style The competitive fighting or forcing conflict style maximizes individual assertiveness i e concern for self and minimizes empathy i e concern for others Groups consisting of competitive members generally enjoy seeking domination over others and typically see conflict as a win or lose predicament 1 Fighters tend to force others to accept their personal views by employing competitive power tactics arguments insults accusations or even violence that foster intimidation 13 Conciliation conflict style The conciliation compromising bargaining or negotiation conflict style is typical of individuals who possess an intermediate level of concern for both personal and others outcomes Compromisers value fairness and in doing so anticipate mutual give and take interactions 11 By accepting some demands put forth by others compromisers believe this agreeableness will encourage others to meet them halfway thus promoting conflict resolution 14 This conflict style can be considered an extension of both yielding and cooperative strategies 1 Cooperation conflict style Characterized by an active concern for both pro social and pro self behavior the cooperation integration confrontation or problem solving conflict style is typically used when an individual has elevated interests in their own outcomes as well as in the outcomes of others During conflict cooperators collaborate with others in an effort to find an amicable solution that satisfies all parties involved in the conflict Individuals using this type of conflict style tend to be both highly assertive and highly empathetic 11 By seeing conflict as a creative opportunity collaborators willingly invest time and resources into finding a win win solution 1 According to the literature on conflict resolution a cooperative conflict resolution style is recommended above all others This resolution may be achieved by lowering the aggressor s guard while raising the ego 15 16 Relational dialectics theory edit Relational dialectics theory RDT introduced by Leslie Baxter and Barbara Matgomery 1988 17 18 explores the ways in which people in relationships use verbal communication to manage conflict and contradiction as opposed to psychology This concept focuses on maintaining a relationship even through contradictions that arise and how relationships are managed through coordinated talk RDT assumes that relationships are composed of opposing tendencies are constantly changing and tensions arises from intimate relationships The main concepts of RDT are Contradictions The concept is that the contrary has the characteristics of its opposite People can seek to be in a relationship but still need their space Totality The totality comes when the opposites unite Thus the relationship is balanced with contradictions and only then it reaches totality Process Comprehended through various social processes These processes simultaneously continue within a relationship in a recurring manner Praxis The relationship progresses with experience and both people interact and communicate effectively to meet their needs Praxis is a concept of practicability in making decisions in a relationship despite opposing wants and needs Strategy of conflict edit Strategy of conflict by Thomas Schelling is the study of negotiation during conflict and strategic behavior that results in the development of conflict behavior This idea is based largely on game theory In A Reorientation of Game Theory Schelling discusses ways in which one can redirect the focus of a conflict in order to gain advantage over an opponent Conflict is a contest Rational behavior in this contest is a matter of judgment and perception Strategy makes predictions using rational behavior behavior motivated by a serious calculation of advantages a calculation that in turn is based on an explicit and internally consistent value system Cooperation is always temporary interests will change Conflict resolution in peace and conflict studies editDefinition edit Within peace and conflict studies a definition of conflict resolution is presented in Peter Wallensteen s book Understanding Conflict Resolution Conflict resolution is a social situation where the armed conflicting parties in a voluntarily agreement resolve to live peacefully with and or dissolve their basic incompatibilities and henceforth cease to use arms against one another 19 The conflicting parties concerned in this definition are formally or informally organized groups engaged in intrastate or interstate conflict 20 21 22 23 Basic incompatibility refers to a severe disagreement between at least two sides where their demands cannot be met by the same resources at the same time 24 Mechanisms edit One theory discussed within the field of peace and conflict studies is conflict resolution mechanisms independent procedures in which the conflicting parties can have confidence They can be formal or informal arrangements with the intention of resolving the conflict 25 In Understanding Conflict Resolution Wallensteen draws from the works of Lewis A Coser Johan Galtung and Thomas Schelling and presents seven distinct theoretical mechanisms for conflict resolutions 26 A shift in priorities for one of the conflicting parties While it is rare that a party completely changes its basic positions it can display a shift in to what it gives highest priority In such an instance new possibilities for conflict resolutions may arise The contested resource is divided In essence this means both conflicting parties display some extent of shift in priorities which then opens up for some form of meeting the other side halfway agreement Horse trading between the conflicting parties This means that one side gets all of its demands met on one issue while the other side gets all of its demands met on another issue The parties decide to share control and rule together over the contested resource It could be permanent or a temporary arrangement for a transition period that when over has led to a transcendence of the conflict The parties agree to leave control to someone else In this mechanism the primary parties agree or accept that a third party takes control over the contested resource The parties resort to conflict resolution mechanisms notably arbitration or other legal procedures This means finding a procedure for resolving the conflict through some of the previously mentioned five ways but with the added quality that it is done through a process outside of the parties immediate control Some issues can be left for later The argument for this is that political conditions and popular attitudes can change and some issues can gain from being delayed as their significance may pale with time Intrastate and interstate edit nbsp Moshe Dayan and Abdullah el Tell reach a ceasefire agreement during the 1948 Arab Israeli War in Jerusalem on 30 November 1948 According to conflict database Uppsala Conflict Data Program s definition war may occur between parties who contest an incompatibility The nature of an incompatibility can be territorial or governmental but a warring party must be a government of a state or any opposition organization or alliance of organizations that uses armed force to promote its position in the incompatibility in an intrastate or an interstate armed conflict 27 Wars can conclude with a peace agreement which is a formal agreement which addresses the disputed incompatibility either by settling all or part of it or by clearly outlining a process for how to regulate the incompatibility 28 A ceasefire is another form of agreement made by warring parties unlike a peace agreement it only regulates the conflict behaviour of warring parties and does not resolve the issue that brought the parties to war in the first place 29 Peacekeeping measures may be deployed to avoid violence in solving such incompatibilities 30 Beginning in the last century political theorists have been developing the theory of a global peace system that relies upon broad social and political measures to avoid war in the interest of achieving world peace 31 The Blue Peace approach developed by Strategic Foresight Group facilitates cooperation between countries over shared water resources thus reducing the risk of war and enabling sustainable development 32 Conflict resolution is an expanding field of professional practice both in the U S and around the world The escalating costs of conflict have increased use of third parties who may serve as a conflict specialists to resolve conflicts In fact relief and development organizations have added peace building specialists to their teams 33 Many major international non governmental organizations have seen a growing need to hire practitioners trained in conflict analysis and resolution Furthermore this expansion has resulted in the need for conflict resolution practitioners to work in a variety of settings such as in businesses court systems government agencies nonprofit organizations and educational institutions throughout the world In the workplace editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message According to the Cambridge dictionary a basic definition of conflict is an active disagreement between people with opposing opinions or principles 34 Conflicts such as disagreements may occur at any moment being a normal part of human interactions The type of conflict and its severity may vary both in content and degree of seriousness however it is impossible to completely avoid it Actually conflict in itself is not necessarily a negative thing When handled constructively it can help people to stand up for themselves and others to evolve and learn how to work together to achieve a mutually satisfactory solution But if conflict is handled poorly it can cause anger hurt divisiveness and more serious problems If it is impossible to completely avoid conflict as it was said the possibilities to experience it are usually higher particularly in complex social contexts in which important diversities are at stake Specially because of this reason speaking about conflict resolution becomes fundamental in ethnically diverse and multicultural work environments in which not only regular work disagreements may occur but in which also different languages worldviews lifestyles and ultimately value differences may diverge Conflict resolution is the process by which two or more parties engaged in a disagreement dispute or debate reach an agreement resolving it 35 It involves a series of stages involved actors models and approaches that may depend on the kind of confrontation at stake and the surrounded social and cultural context However there are some general actions and personal skills that may be very useful when facing a conflict to solve independently of its nature e g an open minded orientation able to analyze the different point of views and perspectives involved as well as an ability to empathize carefully listen and clearly communicate with all the parts involved Sources of conflict may be so many depending on the particular situation and the specific context but some of the most common include Personal differences such as values ethics personalities age education gender socioeconomic status cultural background temperament health religion political beliefs etc Thus almost any social category that serves to differentiate people may become an object of conflict when it does negatively diverge with people who do not share it 36 Clashes of ideas choices or actions Conflict occurs when people does not share common goals or common ways to reach a particular objective e g different work styles Conflict occurs also when there is direct or indirect competition between people or when someone may feel excluded from a particular activity or by some people within the company Lack of communication or poor communication are also significant reasons to start a conflict to misunderstand a particular situation and to create potentially explosive interactions 37 Fundamental strategies edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Although different conflicts may require different ways to handle them this is a list of fundamental strategies that may be implemented when handling a conflictive situation 38 Reaching agreement on rules and procedures Establishing ground rules may include the following actions a Determining a site for the meeting b Setting a formal agenda c Determining who attends d Setting time limits e Setting procedural rules f Following specific do s and don t s Reducing tension and synchronizing the de escalation of hostility In highly emotional situations when people feel angry upset frustrated it is important to implement the following actions a Separating the involved parties b Managing tensions jokes as an instrument to give the opportunity for catharsis c Acknowledging others feelings actively listening to others d De escalation by public statements by parties about the concession the commitments of the parties Improving the accuracy of communication particularly improving each party s understanding of the other s perception a Accurate understanding of the other s position b Role reversal trying to adopt the other s position empathetic attitudes c Imaging describing how they see themselves how the other parties appears to them how they think the other parties will describe them and how the others see themselves Controlling the number and size of issues in the discussion a Fractionate the negotiation a method that divides a large conflict into smaller parts 1 Reduce the number of parties on each side 2 Control the number of substantive issues 3 Search for different ways to divide big issues Establishing common ground where parties can find a basis for agreement a Establishing common goals or superordinate goals b Establishing common enemies c Identifying common expectations d Managing time constraints and deadlines e Reframing the parties view of each other f Build trust through the negotiation process Enhancing the desirability of the options and alternatives that each party presents to the other a Giving the other party an acceptable proposal b Asking for a different decision c Sweeten the other rather than intensifying the threat d Elaborating objective or legitimate criteria to evaluate all possible solutions 39 Approaches edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message A conflict is a common phenomenon in the workplace as mentioned before it can occur because of the most different grounds of diversity and under very different circumstances However it is usually a matter of interests needs priorities goals or values interfering with each other and often a result of different perceptions more than actual differences Conflicts may involve team members departments projects organization and client boss and subordinate organization needs vs personal needs and they are usually immersed in complex relations of power that need to be understood and interpreted in order to define the more tailored way to manage the conflict There are nevertheless some main approaches that may be applied when trying to solve a conflict that may lead to very different outcomes to be valued according to the particular situation and the available negotiation resources Forcing edit When one of the conflict s parts firmly pursues his or her own concerns despite the resistance of the other s This may involve pushing one viewpoint at the expense of another or maintaining firm resistance to the counterpart s actions it is also commonly known as competing Forcing may be appropriate when all other less forceful methods do not work or are ineffective when someone needs to stand up for his her own rights or the represented group organization s rights resist aggression and pressure It may be also considered a suitable option when a quick resolution is required and using force is justified e g in a life threatening situation to stop an aggression and as a very last resort to resolve a long lasting conflict However forcing may also negatively affect the relationship with the opponent in the long run may intensified the conflict if the opponent decides to react in the same way even if it was not the original intention it does not allow to take advantage in a productive way of the other side s position and last but not least taking this approach may require a lot of energy and be exhausting to some individuals Win win collaborating edit Collaboration involves an attempt to work with the other part involved in the conflict to find a win win solution to the problem in hand or at least to find a solution that most satisfies the concerns of both parties The win win approach sees conflict resolution as an opportunity to come to a mutually beneficial result and it includes identifying the underlying concerns of the opponents and finding an alternative which meets each party s concerns From that point of view it is the most desirable outcome when trying to solve a problem for all partners Collaborating may be the best solution when consensus and commitment of other parties is important when the conflict occurs in a collaborative trustworthy environment and when it is required to address the interests of multiple stakeholders But more specially it is the most desirable outcome when a long term relationship is important so that people can continue to collaborate in a productive way collaborating is in few words sharing responsibilities and mutual commitment For parties involved the outcome of the conflict resolution is less stressful however the process of finding and establishing a win win solution may be longer and should be very involving It may require more effort and more time than some other methods for the same reason collaborating may not be practical when timing is crucial and a quick solution or fast response is required Compromising edit Different from the win win solution in this outcome the conflict parties find a mutually acceptable solution which partially satisfies both parties This can occur as both parties converse with one another and seek to understand the other s point of view 40 Compromising may be an optimal solution when the goals are moderately important and not worth the use of more assertive or more involving approaches It may be useful when reaching temporary settlement on complex issues and as a first step when the involved parties do not know each other well or have not yet developed a high level of mutual trust Compromising may be a faster way to solve things when time is a factor The level of tensions can be lower as well but the result of the conflict may be also less satisfactory If this method is not well managed and the factor time becomes the most important one the situation may result in both parties being not satisfied with the outcome i e a lose lose situation Moreover it does not contribute to building trust in the long run and it may require a closer monitoring of the kind of partially satisfactory compromises acquired Withdrawing edit This technique consists on not addressing the conflict postpone it or simply withdrawing for that reason it is also known as Avoiding This outcome is suitable when the issue is trivial and not worth the effort or when more important issues are pressing and one or both the parties do not have time to deal with it Withdrawing may be also a strategic response when it is not the right time or place to confront the issue when more time is needed to think and collect information before acting or when not responding may bring still some winnings for at least some of the involves parties Moreover withdrawing may be also employed when someone know that the other party is totally engaged with hostility and does not want can not to invest further unreasonable efforts Withdrawing may give the possibility to see things from a different perspective while gaining time and collecting further information and specially is a low stress approach particularly when the conflict is a short time one However not acting may be interpreted as an agreement and therefore it may lead to weakening or losing a previously gained position with one or more parties involved Furthermore when using withdrawing as a strategy more time skills and experiences together with other actions may need to be implemented Smoothing edit Smoothing is accommodating the concerns of others first of all rather than one s own concerns This kind of strategy may be applied when the issue of the conflict is much more important for the counterparts whereas for the other is not particularly relevant It may be also applied when someone accepts that he she is wrong and furthermore there are no other possible options than continuing an unworthy competing pushing situation Just as withdrawing smoothing may be an option to find at least a temporal solution or obtain more time and information however it is not an option when priority interests are at stake There is a high risk of being abused when choosing the smoothing option Therefore it is important to keep the right balance and to not give up one own interests and necessities Otherwise confidence in one s ability mainly with an aggressive opponent may be seriously damaged together with credibility by the other parties involved Needed to say in these cases a transition to a Win Win solution in the future becomes particularly more difficult when someone Between organizations editRelationships between organizations such as strategic alliances buyer supplier partnerships organizational networks or joint ventures are prone to conflict Conflict resolution in inter organizational relationships has attracted the attention of business and management scholars They have related the forms of conflict e g integrity based vs competence based conflict to the mode of conflict resolution 41 and the negotiation and repair approaches used by organizations They have also observed the role of important moderating factors such as the type of contractual arrangement 42 the level of trust between organizations 43 or the type of power asymmetry 44 Other forms editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message Conflict management edit Conflict management refers to the long term management of intractable conflicts It is the label for the variety of ways by which people handle grievances standing up for what they consider to be right and against what they consider to be wrong Those ways include such diverse phenomena as gossip ridicule lynching terrorism warfare feuding genocide law mediation and avoidance 45 Which forms of conflict management will be used in any given situation can be somewhat predicted and explained by the social structure or social geometry of the case Conflict management is often considered to be distinct from conflict resolution In order for actual conflict to occur there should be an expression of exclusive patterns which explain why and how the conflict was expressed the way it was Conflict is often connected to a previous issue Resolution refers to resolving a dispute to the approval of one or both parties whereas management is concerned with an ongoing process that may never have a resolution Neither is considered the same as conflict transformation which seeks to reframe the positions of the conflict parties Counseling edit When personal conflict leads to frustration and loss of efficiency counseling may prove helpful Although few organizations can afford to have professional counselors on staff given some training managers may be able to perform this function Nondirective counseling or listening with understanding is little more than being a good listener something often considered to be important in a manager 46 Sometimes simply being able to express one s feelings to a concerned and understanding listener is enough to relieve frustration and make it possible for an individual to advance to a problem solving frame of mind The nondirective approach is one effective way for managers to deal with frustrated subordinates and coworkers 47 There are other more direct and more diagnostic methods that could be used in appropriate circumstances However the great strength of the nondirective approach nb 2 lies in its simplicity its effectiveness and that it deliberately avoids the manager counselor s diagnosing and interpreting emotional problems which would call for special psychological training Listening to staff with sympathy and understanding is unlikely to escalate the problem and is a widely used approach for helping people cope with problems that interfere with their effectiveness in the workplace 47 Culture based edit nbsp The Reconciliation of Jacob and Esau illustration from a Bible card published 1907 by the Providence Lithograph Company Conflict resolution as both a professional practice and academic field is highly sensitive to cultural practices In Western cultural contexts such as Canada and the United States successful conflict resolution usually involves fostering communication among disputants problem solving and drafting agreements that meet underlying needs In these situations conflict resolvers often talk about finding a mutually satisfying win win solution for everyone involved 48 In many non Western cultural contexts such as Afghanistan Vietnam and China it is also important to find win win solutions however the routes taken to find them may be very different In these contexts direct communication between disputants that explicitly addresses the issues at stake in the conflict can be perceived as very rude making the conflict worse and delaying resolution It can make sense to involve religious tribal or community leaders communicate difficult truths through a third party or make suggestions through stories 49 Intercultural conflicts are often the most difficult to resolve because the expectations of the disputants can be very different and there is much occasion for misunderstanding 50 In animals editConflict resolution has also been studied in non humans including dogs cats monkeys snakes elephants and primates 51 Aggression is more common among relatives and within a group than between groups Instead of creating distance between the individuals primates tend to be more intimate in the period after an aggressive incident These intimacies consist of grooming and various forms of body contact Stress responses including increased heart rates usually decrease after these reconciliatory signals Different types of primates as well as many other species who live in groups display different types of conciliatory behavior Resolving conflicts that threaten the interaction between individuals in a group is necessary for survival giving it a strong evolutionary value A further focus of this is among species that have stable social units individual relationships and the potential for intragroup aggression that may disrupt beneficial relationships The role of these reunions in negotiating relationships is examined along with the susceptibility of these relationships to partner value asymmetries and biological market effects 52 These findings contradict previous existing theories about the general function of aggression i e creating space between individuals first proposed by Konrad Lorenz which seems to be more the case in conflicts between groups than it is within groups In addition to research in primates biologists are beginning to explore reconciliation in other animals Until recently the literature dealing with reconciliation in non primates has consisted of anecdotal observations and very little quantitative data Although peaceful post conflict behavior had been documented going back to the 1960s it was not until 1993 that Rowell made the first explicit mention of reconciliation in feral sheep Reconciliation has since been documented in spotted hyenas 53 54 lions bottlenose dolphins 55 dwarf mongoose domestic goats 56 domestic dogs 57 and recently in red necked wallabies 58 Education editUniversities worldwide offer programs of study pertaining to conflict research analysis and practice Conrad Grebel University College at the University of Waterloo has the oldest running peace and conflict studies PACS program in Canada 59 PACS can be taken as an Honors 4 year general or 3 year general major joint major minor and diploma Grebel also offers an interdisciplinary Master of Peace and Conflict Studies professional program The Cornell University ILR School houses the Scheinman Institute on Conflict Resolution which offers undergraduate graduate and professional training on conflict resolution 60 It also offers dispute resolution concentrations for its MILR JD MILR MPS and MS PhD graduate degree programs 61 At the graduate level Eastern Mennonite University s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding offers a Master of Arts in Conflict Transformation a dual Master of Divinity MA in Conflict Transformation degree and several graduate certificates 62 EMU also offers an accelerated 5 year BA in Peacebuilding and Development MA in Conflict Transformation Additional graduate programs are offered at Columbia University Georgetown University Johns Hopkins University Creighton University the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and Trinity College Dublin 63 George Mason University s Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution offers BA BS MS and PhD degrees in Conflict Analysis and Resolution as well as an undergraduate minor graduate certificates and joint degree programs 64 Nova Southeastern University also offers a PhD in Conflict Analysis amp Resolution in both online and on campus formats 65 Conflict resolution is a growing area of interest in UK pedagogy with teachers and students both encouraged to learn about mechanisms that lead to aggressive action and those that lead to peaceful resolution The University of Law one of the oldest common law training institutions in the world offers a legal focused master s degree in conflict resolution as an LL M Conflict resolution 66 Tel Aviv University offers two graduate degree programs in the field of conflict resolution including the English language International Program in Conflict Resolution and Mediation allowing students to learn in a geographic region which is the subject of much research on international conflict resolution The Nelson Mandela Center for Peace amp Conflict Resolution at Jamia Millia Islamia University New Delhi is one of the first centers for peace and conflict resolution to be established at an Indian university It offers a two year full time MA course in Conflict Analysis and Peace Building as well as a PhD in Conflict and Peace Studies 67 In Sweden Linnaeus University Lund University and Uppsala University offer programs on bachelor master and or doctoral level in Peace and Conflict Studies 68 69 70 Uppsala University also hosts its own Department of Peace and Conflict Research among other things occupied with running the conflict database UCDP Uppsala Conflict Data Program 70 71 See also editAppeasement Civil resistance Conflict continuum Conflict early warning Conflict management Conflict resolution research Conflict style inventory Cost of conflict Deterrence Dialectic Dialogue Fair fighting Family therapy Gunnysacking Interpersonal communication Let the Wookiee win Nonviolent Communication Organizations edit Center for the Study of Genocide Conflict Resolution and Human Rights Conscience Taxes for Peace not War is a London organisation that promotes peacebuilding as an alternative to military security Crisis Management Initiative CMI Heidelberg Institute for International Conflict Research Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution Search for Common Ground is one of the world s largest non government organisations dedicated to conflict resolution Seeds of Peace develops and empowers young leaders from regions of conflict to work towards peace through coexistence United Network of Young Peacebuilders UNOY is a global non governmental organization and youth network dedicated to the role of youth in peacebuilding and conflict resolution University for Peace is a United Nations mandated organization and graduate school dedicated to conflict resolution and peace studies Uppsala Conflict Data Program is an academic data collection project that provides descriptions of political violence and conflict resolution A Symposium on Conflict Resolution Internal and External at Kaivalyadhama IndiaFootnotes edit For example in Chinese culture reasons for avoidance include sustaining a good mood protecting the avoider and other philosophical and spiritual reasonings Feng and Wilson 2011 full citation needed Nondirective counseling is based on the client centered therapy of Carl Rogers References edit a b c d e f Forsyth Donelson R 19 March 2009 Group Dynamics 5th ed Boston MA Wadsworth Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0495599524 Mayer Bernard 27 March 2012 The Dynamics of Conflict A Guide to Engagement and Intervention 2nd ed San Francisco CA Jossey Bass ISBN 978 0470613535 Methods Conflict Resolution 14 March 2016 Conflict Resolution 14 March 2016 Retrieved 14 March 2016 via wisegeek Rapoport A 1989 The origins of violence Approaches to the study of conflict New York NY Paragon House Rapoport A 1992 Peace An idea whose time has come Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press Roberts Adam Ash Timothy Garton eds 3 September 2009 Civil Resistance and Power Politics The Experience of Non violent Action from Gandhi to the Present Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199552016 Das Tuhin K 2018 Regret Analysis Towards Conflict Resolution SSRN doi 10 2139 ssrn 3173490 S2CID 216920077 SSRN 3173490 Das Tuhin K 2018 Conflict Resolution Curve Concept and Reality SSRN doi 10 2139 ssrn 3196791 S2CID 219337801 SSRN 3196791 Das Tuhin K Datta Ray Ishita 2018 North Korea s Peace Building in the Light of Conflict Resolution Curve SSRN doi 10 2139 ssrn 3193759 SSRN 3193759 Goldfien Jeffrey H Robbennolt Jennifer K 2007 What if the lawyers have their way An empirical assessment of conflict strategies and attitudes toward mediation styles Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 22 2 277 320 a b c Bayazit Mahmut Mannix Elizabeth A 2003 Should I stay or should I go Predicting team members intent to remain in the team Placed there on purpose with unlieing motives Small Group Research 32 3 290 321 doi 10 1177 1046496403034003002 S2CID 144220387 Morrison Jeanne 2008 The relationship between emotional intelligence competencies and preferred conflict handling styles Journal of Nursing Management 16 8 974 983 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2834 2008 00876 x ISSN 1365 2834 PMID 19094110 Morrill Calvin 1995 The Executive Way Conflict Management in Corporations Chicago US University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 53873 0 LCCN 94033344 Van de Vliert Evert Euwema Martin C 1994 Agreeableness and activeness as components of conflict behaviors Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 66 4 674 687 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 66 4 674 PMID 8189346 Sternberg Robert J Dobson Diane M 1987 Resolving interpersonal conflicts An analysis of stylistic consistency Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 52 4 794 812 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 52 4 794 ISSN 0022 3514 Jarboe Susan C Witteman Hal R 1996 Intragroup conflict management in task oriented groups The influence of problem sources and problem analyses Small Group Research 27 2 316 338 doi 10 1177 1046496496272007 S2CID 145442320 Baxter L A 1988 A dialectical perspective of communication strategies in relationship development In S Duck Ed Handbook of personal relationships pp 257 273 New York Wiley Montgomery Barbara 1988 A Dialectical Analysis of the Tensions Functions and Strategic Challenges of Communication in Young Adult Friendships Communication Yearbook 12 ed James A Anderson Newbury CA Sage 157 189 Wallensteen Peter 2015 Understanding conflict resolution Fourth ed Los Angeles SAGE Publications p 57 ISBN 9781473902107 OCLC 900795950 Wallensteen Peter 7 May 2015 Understanding conflict resolution Fourth ed Los Angeles p 20 ISBN 9781473902107 OCLC 900795950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Allansson Marie Actors definition Department of Peace and Conflict Research Uppsala University Sweden pcr uu se Retrieved 25 September 2019 Larson Jennifer M 11 May 2021 Networks of Conflict and Cooperation Annual Review of Political Science 24 1 89 107 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 041719 102523 Balcells Laia Stanton Jessica A 11 May 2021 Violence Against Civilians During Armed Conflict Moving Beyond the Macro and Micro Level Divide Annual Review of Political Science 24 1 45 69 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 041719 102229 Wallensteen Peter 7 May 2015 Understanding conflict resolution Fourth ed Los Angeles p 17 ISBN 9781473902107 OCLC 900795950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wallensteen Peter 7 May 2015 Understanding conflict resolution Fourth ed Los Angeles p 41 ISBN 9781473902107 OCLC 900795950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wallensteen Peter 7 May 2015 Understanding conflict resolution Fourth ed Los Angeles pp 56 58 ISBN 9781473902107 OCLC 900795950 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Uppsala Conflict Data Program Definitions Warring party Accessed April 2013 Uppsala Conflict Data Program Definitions Peace agreement Accessed April 2013 Uppsala Conflict Data Program Ceasefire agreements Accessed April 2013 Bellamy Alex J Williams Paul 29 March 2010 Understanding Peacekeeping Polity ISBN 978 0 7456 4186 7 McElwee Timothy A 2007 The Role of UN Police in Nonviolently Countering Terrorism In Ram Senthil Summy Ralph eds Nonviolence An Alternative for Defeating Global Terror ism Nova Science Publishers pp 187 210 ISBN 978 1 60021 812 5 Strategic Foresight Group Anticipating and Influencing Global Future PDF www strategicforesight com Lundgren Magnus 2016 Conflict management capabilities of peace brokering international organizations 1945 2010 A new dataset Conflict Management and Peace Science 33 2 198 223 doi 10 1177 0738894215572757 S2CID 156002204 conflict dictionary cambridge org Retrieved 20 March 2021 What is Conflict Resolution and How Does It Work PON Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School 15 June 2021 Retrieved 2 October 2021 corissajoy 6 July 2016 Culture and Conflict Beyond Intractability Retrieved 20 March 2021 Five Steps to Manage amp Resolve Conflict in the Workplace Experiential 2 November 2010 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Conflict Resolution 8 Strategies to Manage Workplace Conflict Business Know How Retrieved 20 March 2021 The Five Steps to Conflict Resolution www amanet org Retrieved 21 January 2021 Baldoni John 12 October 2012 Compromising When Compromise Is Hard Harvard Business Review ISSN 0017 8012 Retrieved 2 October 2021 Johnson Simon McMillan John Woodruff Christopher 2002 Courts and Relational Contracts The Journal of Law Economics and Organization 18 1 221 277 doi 10 1093 jleo 18 1 221 ISSN 8756 6222 Harmon Derek J Kim Peter H Mayer Kyle J 2015 Breaking the letter vs spirit of the law How the interpretation of contract violations affects trust and the management of relationships Strategic Management Journal 36 4 497 517 doi 10 1002 smj 2231 Janowicz Panjaitan Martyna Krishnan Rekha 2009 Measures for Dealing with Competence and Integrity Violations of Interorganizational Trust at the Corporate and Operating Levels of Organizational Hierarchy Journal of Management Studies 46 2 245 268 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6486 2008 00798 x ISSN 1467 6486 S2CID 144439444 Gaski John F 1984 The Theory of Power and Conflict in Channels of Distribution Journal of Marketing 48 3 9 29 doi 10 1177 002224298404800303 ISSN 0022 2429 S2CID 168149955 Himes Joseph S 1 June 2008 Conflict and Conflict Management University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 3270 3 Knowles Henry P Saxberg Borje O 1971 Chapter 8 Personality and Leadership Behavior Reading MA Addison Wesley Publishing Co ASIN B0014O4YN0 OCLC 118832 a b Johnson Richard Arvid January 1976 Management Systems and Society An Introduction Pacific Palisades Calif Goodyear Pub Co pp 148 142 ISBN 978 0 87620 540 2 OCLC 2299496 OL 8091729M Ury William Fisher Roger 1981 Getting To Yes Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In 1st ed Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Co ISBN 978 0 395 31757 0 Augsburger David W 1992 Conflict Mediation Across Cultures Pathways and Patterns 1st ed Louisville KY Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0664219611 Okech Jane E Atieno Pimpleton Gray Asher M Vannatta Rachel Champe Julia December 2016 Intercultural Conflict in Groups Journal for Specialists in Group Work 41 4 350 369 doi 10 1080 01933922 2016 1232769 S2CID 152221705 de Waal Frans B M 28 July 2000 Primates A natural heritage of conflict resolution Science 289 5479 586 590 Bibcode 2000Sci 289 586D doi 10 1126 science 289 5479 586 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 10915614 S2CID 15058824 Aureli Filippo 2002 Conflict Resolution following aggression in gregarious animals a predictive framework Animal Behaviour 64 3 325 343 doi 10 1006 anbe 2002 3071 S2CID 54361369 via Elsevier Science Direct Wahaj Sofia A Guse Kevin R Holekamp Kay E December 2001 Reconciliation in the spotted hyena Crocuta crocuta Ethology 107 12 1057 1074 doi 10 1046 j 1439 0310 2001 00717 x ISSN 0179 1613 Smith Jennifer E Powning Katherine S Dawes Stephanie E Estrada Jillian R Hopper Adrienne L Piotrowski Stacey L Holekamp Kay E February 2011 Greetings promote cooperation and reinforce social bonds among spotted hyaenas Animal Behaviour 81 2 401 415 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2010 11 007 S2CID 2693688 Weaver Ann October 2003 Conflict and reconciliation in captive bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus Marine Mammal Science 19 4 836 846 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2003 tb01134 x Schino Gabriele 1998 Reconciliation in domestic goats Behaviour 135 3 343 356 doi 10 1163 156853998793066302 ISSN 0005 7959 JSTOR 4535531 Cools Annemieke K A Van Hout Alain J M Nelissen Mark H J January 2008 Canine reconciliation and third party initiated postconflict affiliation Do peacemaking social mechanisms in dogs rival those of higher primates Ethology 114 1 53 63 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2007 01443 x Cordoni Giada Norscia Ivan 29 January 2014 Peace making in marsupials The first study in the red necked wallaby Macropus rufogriseus PLOS One 9 1 e86859 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 986859C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0086859 PMC 3906073 PMID 24489796 University at Waterloo Peace and Conflict Studies About Cornell ILR Scheinman Institute Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations Retrieved 23 August 2009 Scheinman Institute on Conflict Resolution Degrees Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations 2014 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Graduate Program in Conflict Transformation Eastern Mennonite University s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding Guide to MA Program in Peace and Conflict Resolution and Related Fields Internationalpeaceandconflict org Archived from the original on 11 January 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Academic Programs Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution carterschool gmu edu George Mason University 2020 Retrieved 7 July 2020 PhD in Conflict Analysis amp Resolution Program Nova Southeastern University 2011 Retrieved 3 December 2014 LLM Masters in Law Degree The University of Law www law ac uk Retrieved 3 August 2018 Jamia Centres Nelson Mandela Centre for Peace and Conflict Resolution Introduction Jmi ac in Retrieved 6 December 2014 Linnaeus University Website Linnaeus University Website 16 August 2019 Retrieved 24 September 2019 Lund University Website Lund University Webpage 23 September 2019 Retrieved 24 September 2019 a b Uppsala University Department of Peace and Conflict Research Uppsala University Webpage Retrieved 24 September 2019 Uppsala University Department of Peace and Research UCDP Uppsala University Webpage Retrieved 24 September 2019 Works cited editAugsburger D 1992 Conflict mediation across cultures Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press Bannon I amp Paul Collier Eds 2003 Natural resources and violent conflict Options and actions Washington D C The World Bank Ury F amp Rodger Fisher 1981 Getting to yes Negotiating agreement without giving in New York NY Penguin Group Wilmot W amp Jouyce Hocker 2007 Interpersonal conflict New York NY McGraw Hill Companies Bercovitch Jacob and Jackson Richard 2009 Conflict Resolution in the Twenty first Century Principles Methods and Approaches Archived 8 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor de Waal Frans B M and Angeline van Roosmalen 1979 Reconciliation and consolation among chimpanzees Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 5 55 66 de Waal Frans B M 1989 Peacemaking Among Primates Harvard University Press Cambridge MA Judge Peter G de Waal Frans B M 1993 Conflict avoidance among rhesus monkeys coping with short term crowding Animal Behaviour 46 2 221 232 doi 10 1006 anbe 1993 1184 S2CID 53175846 Veenema Hans et al 1994 Methodological improvements for the study of reconciliation Behavioural Processes 31 1 29 38 doi 10 1016 0376 6357 94 90035 3 PMID 24897415 S2CID 25126127 de Waal Frans B M and Filippo Aureli 1996 Consolation reconciliation and a possible cognitive difference between macaques and chimpanzees Reaching into thought The minds of the great apes Eds Anne E Russon Kim A Bard Sue Taylor Parker Cambridge University Press New York NY 80 110 Aureli Filippo 1997 Post conflict anxiety in non human primates the mediating role of emotion in conflict resolution Aggressive Behavior 23 5 315 328 doi 10 1002 sici 1098 2337 1997 23 5 lt 315 aid ab2 gt 3 0 co 2 h Castles Duncan L Whiten Andrew 1998 Post conflict behaviour of wild olive baboons I Reconciliation redirection and consolation Ethology 104 2 126 147 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 1998 tb00057 x Aureli Filippo and Frans B M de Waal eds 2000 Natural Conflict Resolution University of California Press Berkeley CA de Waal Frans B M 2000 Primates A natural heritage of conflict resolution Science 289 586 590 Hicks Donna 2011 Dignity The Essential Role It Plays in Resolving Conflict Yale University Press Silk Joan B 2002 The form and function of reconciliation in primates Annual Review of Anthropology 31 21 44 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 31 032902 101743 Weaver Ann de Waal Frans B M 2003 The mother offspring relationship as a template in social development reconciliation in captive brown capuchins Cebus apella Journal of Comparative Psychology 117 1 101 110 doi 10 1037 0735 7036 117 1 101 PMID 12735370 S2CID 9632420 Palagi Elisabetta et al 2004 Reconciliation and consolation in captive bonobos Pan paniscus American Journal of Primatology 62 1 15 30 doi 10 1002 ajp 20000 PMID 14752810 S2CID 22452710 Palagi Elisabetta et al 2005 Aggression and reconciliation in two captive groups of Lemur catta International Journal of Primatology 26 2 279 294 doi 10 1007 s10764 005 2925 x S2CID 22639928 Lorenzen Michael 2006 Conflict Resolution and Academic Library Instruction LOEX Quarterly 33 no 1 2 6 9 11 Winslade John amp Monk Gerald 2000 Narrative Mediation A New Approach to Conflict Resolution Jossey Bass Publishers San Francisco Bar Siman Tov Yaacov Ed 2004 From Conflict Resolution to Reconciliation Oxford University Press Tesler Pauline 2001 2008 Collaborative Law Achieving Effective Resolution in Divorce without Litigation American Bar Association Tesler Pauline and Thompson Peggy 2006 Collaborative Divorce The Revolutionary New Way to Restructure Your Family Resolve Legal Issues and Move On with Your Life Harper Collins Further reading edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Conflict resolution Caraccilo Dominic J 2011 Beyond Guns and Steel A War Termination Strategy Santa Barbara California PSI ISBN 978 0 313 39149 1 Coleman Peter T 2011 The Five Percent Finding Solutions to Seemingly Impossible Conflicts PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 921 2 Kellett Peter M 2007 Conflict Dialogue London Sage Publications ISBN 978 1 4129 0930 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conflict resolution amp oldid 1223486002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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