1 / 15

GV-506 (weeks 16-17)

GV-506 (weeks 16-17). Mediation. Types of peaceful management of conflict per UN charter. Direct negotiation-bargaining Mediation (3 rd party involvement) Conciliation Arbitration-adjudication (international law and courts). What are the characteristics of mediation?.

shiela
Télécharger la présentation

GV-506 (weeks 16-17)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GV-506 (weeks 16-17) Mediation

  2. Types of peaceful management of conflict per UN charter • Direct negotiation-bargaining • Mediation (3rd party involvement) • Conciliation • Arbitration-adjudication (international law and courts)

  3. What are the characteristics of mediation? • An extension and continuation of peaceful conflict management • Intervention of an outsider: individual; group; organization (NGOs)—or combination • It is noncoercive-nonviolent-nonbinding form of intervention • Mediation has as a goal to transform a conflict • Mediators carry their own baggage consciously or unconsciously • Mediation is a voluntary form of conflict management • Mediators are often impartial and acceptable parties Should mediators be impartial?

  4. Boulding’s three faces of power • Threat power • Deterrence • State authority over citizens • Economic power • Integrative power • Legitimacy, persuasion, loyalty • All three faces of power are necessary: Why? • Examples: Soviet Union, Germany during WWII, British empire

  5. All mediation situations have: • A conflict • Parties in conflict • Process of mediation • Context of mediation

  6. Ingredients of Conflict • Needs • Perceptions—Emotions (role of culture) • Values (role of culture) • Power • Distribution of costs and benefits (distributional aspects of bargaining) • Salience

  7. Why and when do actors mediate? • Conflict is long and complex—security dilemma • Parties’ conflict management attempts have reached and impasse • The cost of war has become prohibitive (ripeness moment) • Willingness to cooperate • Mediators as individuals • Spread their own ideas • Put into practice a set of ideas • Gain access to major channels of political communication (career moves) • Mediators as states: • Mandate to intervene (IGOs regional and global) • Security and national interests • Enhance their own power and position in global affairs • Mediators are actors

  8. Methods that mediators use • Communication strategies • Supply information-making rapport-clarify the situation—transmit messages from one side to the other • Formulation strategies • Choose meeting site • Control pace and formality of meetings • Structure the agenda • Reduce tensions-highlight interests • Suggest concessions and help parties to save face • Manipulative strategies • Change parties expectations/incentive structure • Help parties to show commitment • Promise sources or threaten withdrawal (stick and carrot) • Threaten punishments

  9. When is mediation successful? • Subjective perceptions of satisfaction • Fairness of mediation and improved overall climate of parties’ relationship • Objective criteria: • Cessation or reduction of violent behavior (for how long?)

  10. NGOs as negotiators • Nongovernmental-- non official--independent • Oxfam, Human Rights Watch, Red cross/crescent, CARE, Amnesty International • Médecins sans frontières (Nobel Peace Prize in 1994) • Large spectrum of institutions: humanitarian and developmental goals • Bridge between grassroots level and official world • Goals and practices: • Humanitarian • Human Rights • Conflict Resolution (e.g. Carter Center-Joan B. Kroc Center) • What kind of power: • Referent power (relation between mediator and parties) • Expert power (information and knowledge) • Informational power (mediator as go-between) • Legitimacy (based on perceptions of the parties)

  11. Case of Mozambique: • Peace agreement of 1992 • Declaration of cease-fire • Recognition of political parties • National elections and united army • Regional and international involvement negotiated • Outcomes: • Renamo resistance movement into a political party • Return of IDP and refugees • Free and fair elections (87% turnout)

More Related