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International negotiations 5th by barry INChap017

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17-1 CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Managing Negotiation Impasses McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-2 The Nature of “Difficult to Resolve” Negotiations and Why They Occur • • • • • • • The nature of impasse Causes of impasses and intractable negotiations Characteristics of the parties Characteristics of the issues Characteristics of the environment Characteristics of the negotiation setting Characteristics of the conflict resolution process McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-3 The Role of Power in Impasses McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-4 The Nature of Impasse Impasse is a condition or state of the conflict in which there is no apparent quick or easy resolution • Impasse is not necessarily bad or destructive • Impasse does not have to be permanent • Impasse can be tactical or genuine – Tactical impasse: parties deliberately refuse to proceed as a way to gain leverage – Genuine impasse: parties feel unable to move forward without sacrificing something important McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-5 The Nature of Impasse • Impasse perceptions can differ from reality – The perception of impasse can be created by an intransigent negotiator who is looking to extract concessions from the other party – Intransigence can be defined as a party’s unwillingness to move to any fallback position through concession or compromise McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-6 What Causes Impasses and Intractable Negotiations? A negotiation becomes more tractable when it becomes easier to resolve, and intractable when it is more difficult to resolve • Intractable conflicts vary along four dimensions – – – – Divisiveness Intensity Pervasiveness Complexity McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-7 Characteristics of the Parties • How one defines one’s self • Comparing one’s self to others • Perceptions of power • Revenge and anger Conflict management style McGraw- â2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-8 Characteristics of the Parties • How one defines one’s self – Identity - “who am I?” – Conflict occurs when people’s identities are threatened • Comparing one’s self to others – Characterization - “Who are they?” – Blame others when things go wrong, take credit for successes • Perceptions of power – A negotiator may bargain tough because they believe they can effectively exercise coercive power McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-9 Characteristics of the Parties • Revenge and anger – To correct injustice – To stand up and express one’s self-worth – To deter future occurrences of undesirable behaviors • Conflict management style – Parties often avoid conflict in creative ways: • Aggressive avoidance— intimidate others to keep them away • Passive avoidance—try to ignore the other • Passive aggressive avoidance—- blame the other party and walk away McGraw- â2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-10 Characteristics of the Parties Conflict management style (cont.) • Avoidance by claiming hopelessness — “What’s the use… ” • Avoidance through surrogates — use a ‘surrogate’ to take the other on • Avoidance through denial — make believe it isn’t there • Avoidance through premature problem solving —“I fixed everything” • Avoidance by folding — “We’ll it your way; now can we talk about something else?” McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-11 Characteristics of the Negotiation Context • The negotiation setting – Changing locations can be a new start • Temporal (time) issues – Earlier compromises re-packaged may break impasse • Relational issues – Replacing an aggressive team member can signal change • Cultural issues – Changing strategy can change attitudes (i.e bring in a mediator) McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-12 Characteristics of the Issues • Value differences – Vary from minor differences to major differences in ideology, lifestyle, of what is considered sacred and critical • High stakes distributive bargaining – Parties may have inflated their negotiating positions to the point where there is no apparent zone of agreement • Risk to human health and safety – The threat to human welfare is clear and apparent McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-13 Characteristics of the Negotiation Setting Negotiation settings include: • Temporal issues • Relational issues Cultural issues McGraw- â2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-14 Characteristics of the Conflict Resolution Process Processes that increase the likelihood of impasse: – The atmosphere is charged with anger, frustration and resentment – Channels of communication are closed or constrained – Original issues at stake have become blurred and ill defined – Parties tend to perceive great differences in their respective positions – As anger and tension increase, parties become locked in their initial positions – Those on the same side view each other favorably McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-15 Fundamental Mistakes that Cause Impasses • • • • • • Neglecting the other side’s problem Too much of a focus on price Positions over interests Too much focus on common ground Neglecting BATNAs Adjusting perceptions during the negotiation McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-16 How to Resolve Impasses Impasses need to be resolved on three levels: • Cognitive resolution – • Change how the parties view the situation Emotional resolution – • Change how the parties feel about the impasse Behavioral resolution – McGraw- Specify ways the parties can stop difficult conflict dynamics ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-17 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Reach agreement on rules and procedures • Reduce tension and synchronize de-escalation of hostility • Improve the accuracy of communication • Control the number and size of issues • Establish common ground • Enhance the desirability of options and alternatives McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-18 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Agreement on rules and procedures – Obtain mutual agreement about the rules that will govern the negotiation – Determine a site for a meeting – Set a formal agenda – Determine who may attend the meetings – Set time limits for individual meetings – Set procedural rules – Follow specific do’s and don’ts McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-19 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Reducing tension and synchronizing deescalation – – – – Separate the parties Manage tension Acknowledge the other’s feelings: active listening Synchronize de-escalation • Decide on a small concession that each side could make to signal good faith McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-20 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Improving the accuracy of communication – Role reversal – Imaging: parties describe McGraw- how they see themselves how the other party appears to them how they think the other party would describe them how they think the other party sees themselves ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-21 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Controlling issues – Fractionate the negotiation • • • • • • McGraw- Reduce the number of parties on each side Control the number of substantive issues involved State issues in concrete terms rather than as principles Restrict the precedents involved, both procedural and substantive Search for ways to fractionate the big issues Depersonalize issues: Separate them from the parties advocating them ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-22 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Establishing common ground – – – – – – – – Superordinate goals Common enemies Common expectations Manage time constraints and deadlines Reframe the parties view of each other Build trust Search for semantic resolutions Use analogical reasoning McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-23 Strategies for Resolving Impasses • Enhancing the desirability of options to the other party – – – – Give the other party a “yesable” proposal Ask for a different decision Sweeten the offer rather than intensifying the threat Use legitimacy or objective criteria to evaluate solutions McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-24 Fisher’s “Demand Dynamics” McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill ...17-2 The Nature of “Difficult to Resolve” Negotiations and Why They Occur • • • • • • • The nature of impasse Causes of impasses and intractable negotiations Characteristics of the parties... Impasse • Impasse perceptions can differ from reality – The perception of impasse can be created by an intransigent negotiator who is looking to extract concessions from the other party – Intransigence... concession or compromise McGraw- ©2006 The McGraw-Hill 17-6 What Causes Impasses and Intractable Negotiations? A negotiation becomes more tractable when it becomes easier to resolve, and intractable

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