Before All Else Fails, Press Reset - Dispute Resolution Journal - Vol. 70, No. 1
Author(s):
Jeanne Maes
Allen Stansbury
Ross Schifo
Page Count:
8 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
March, 2015
Description:
Originally from Dispute Resolution Journal
Preview Page
Computers, circuit breakers, and some other electronic devices
have a solution in case operational failure—a ‘reset’ button. This
button allows the machine operator to clear the machine’s ‘memory’
and bring it back to an initialized state—a point before the failure
occurred. Thus, it enables the operator to have the machine function
with as little disruption as possible.
Is pressing a ‘reset button’ really possible in dispute situations? If it
is, under what conditions might this occur? How might this be handled
by facilitators, mediators, and other dispute resolution specialists?
I. CONSIDERING THE POSSIBILITIES
The good news is “yes”, it is often possible to ‘reset’ a conflict
situation. In exploring this possibility, we’ll consider two extremes.
The first occurs when teams or disputants are relatively new to their
relationship. In such cases, they probably haven’t experienced long
periods of distrust of each other. Hence, “resetting” may be possible by
simply by appealing to logic. Unfortunately, there are no mechanical
buttons or means to do this, as in the above electronic examples.
Consider for example, a high profile multi-party construction
project, in which the various stakeholders had partnered, meaning that
they had established common goals; identified critical project issues;
developed specific plans to deal with those issues; and developed an
issue resolution process targeted at resolving disputes at the lowest
operational level possible. These first steps towards an effective
partnership were taken early in the Initiating and Planning phases of
the project. As work moved into the Execution phase, several key
personnel changes were made based on the technical requirements of
the scope. As these new personnel began to integrate into the project
team, a bottleneck arose that hindered the stakeholders’ ability to
communicate smoothly, stay on schedule and within cost. The project
management team sent a red flag up the chain of command (which
management team sent a red flag up the chain of command (which