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Conflict Communication

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Title: Conflict Communication


1
Conflict Communication
  • Part II

2
Chapter 8
  • Anger

3
Anger
  • What is Anger?
  • Anger is importantlarge effects on social
    relationships
  • Anger is a strong feeling of displeasure
  • Antagonism and rage are synonymous
  • Different from hurt or irritated
  • May lead to revenge and/or violence
  • Anger can sometimes be used constructively

4
Misconceptions
  • We are not capable of controlling destructive
    anger
  • Uncontrolled and destructive anger expression is
    natural
  • Uncontrolled and destructive anger expression is
    a force that must be released
  • E.g. venting, letting off steam, blow your
    top
  • Others cause our anger

5
Anger
  • Most common between close ties
  • More contact
  • More caring about the actions/feelings of the
    other
  • Greater interdependence
  • Relationship success matters more
  • More confident that expression is acceptable
  • Greater predictability

6
Anger
  • Anger manifestations
  • 1. One type occurs instantly with no malice or
    forethought
  • Even in people not generally viewed as hostile or
    aggressive.
  • 2. Another form festers away over time
  • Revenge.
  • 3. A third type is attached to ones personality
    trait-like
  • Beneath the surface
  • Can quickly manifest when individuals feel
    pressured, defensive, attacked, told what to do
    (control)

7
Anger
  • Type 3 trait-like anger
  • Enduring disposition to experiencing anger more
    frequently, more intensely, and for a longer
  • Often tuned to anger-related words
  • Responds to anger words more quickly than to
    other emotion words
  • People who have low-anger trait tend to
    spontaneously reframe the circumstances in ways
    that deflect or inhibit their anger

8
Anger
  • Different sources of anger loss of control,
    frustration, fear, insecurity, loss, sadness
  • Men and women experience it differently
  • Men anger is empoweringthey have power and it
    gives them more
  • Women emerges out of feelings of frustration and
    powerlessness
  • As people age
  • Less likely to exhibit trait anger.
  • Anger for older adults (50s and up) is less
    frequent and less intense
  • Less overt displays of anger

9
Anger
  • Managing Anger
  • Three Different Ways of Expressing or Not
    Expressing Ones Anger
  • Anger-Ins (hold it in)
  • Anger-outs (express it)
  • Anger controllers (manage it)

10
Anger
  • Anger-ins
  • Difficulty in admitting that they are angry
  • Know that they are angry but dont want to tell
    the other person
  • Tell others about their anger
  • Generally passive aggressive.

11
Anger
  • Anger-outs
  • Automatic reactions, quick to criticize, blame,
    and accuse
  • Minor aggressive acts such as bickering
  • Verbal aggression
  • Physical aggression, force

12
Anger
  • Anger controllers
  • Think positively about conflict
  • Use techniques to better manage it
  • Collaborate and work together toward mutually
    satisfactory solutions
  • Use the S-TLC system
  • Negotiate rather than compete
  • Manage the conflict climate and stress levels
  • Use assertive communication behavior
  • Employ the steps of the interpersonal
    confrontation ritual

13
Anger
  • Interpersonal confrontation ritual
  • Identify problem(s)/needs/issues
  • Be honest, be complete
  • Many people cant remember what they were
    fighting about
  • Signal the need to talk
  • In a way that doesnt threaten face or inflame
  • Confront talk about your problem
  • Be assertive, not aggressive
  • Listen to feedback
  • Resolve seek mutual agreement
  • Seek compromise as a last resort
  • Follow up set a time/place

14
Anger
  • What to do before expressing (or withholding)
    anger
  • Take time out
  • Use relaxation exercises
  • Engage in self-talk
  • Seek alternative ways to release anger
  • Uncover the emotion that is disguised as anger
  • See your part in the problem
  • Mentally switch places with the other

15
Anger
  • If you must expressing anger do it effectively
  • Dont yell, make threatening gestures, curse or
    swear, threaten, mock, or use alcohol as a means
    of courage
  • Express after cooling down
  • Direct at the target
  • Restore a sense of justice
  • Regain control
  • Dont invite retaliation
  • Anticipate the effect of your words and actions
  • Try to keep the other focused on the here and now

16
Anger
  • If another is the one in anger
  • Remain calm
  • Acknowledge the source of anger
  • Listen and reflect
  • Walk away if necessary
  • But promise to engage later

17
Managing Face
  • Chapter 9

18
Conflict and Face Issues
  • What is it?
  • Impression or image people have of themselves
  • Based on the approval and acceptance of others
  • Looking glass self
  • Isnt necessarily very accurate
  • One of our most valuable possessions
  • Often very fragile
  • Heavily guarded well defended
  • All this is impression management

19
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Fundamental assumption
  • People are motivated to create and maintain
    impressions of themselves (core of many conflict
    situations)
  • Demands of face
  • Create and sustain self-identity create,
    protect, and maintain others identities
  • When people lose face shame (self-focused)
    and/or guilt (behavior-focused)
  • May also seek retaliation

20
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Positive face
  • A positive and consistent self image that is
    accepted by the group, peers, others
  • We want to feel that others approve and agree
    with this (somewhat fictional) self image
  • Desire to be liked and admired
  • Relates to self-esteem issues

21
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Face-threatening act acts that conflict with the
    face wants and needs
  • Autonomous face (also negative face)
  • Im in control of my fate, responsible mature
  • Im self-sufficient, independent, reliable
  • May be seen as silent leaders
  • Im part of the team, but I lead by example
  • Impose on my freedom to be in control face
    threat (respond with defensiveness)
  • Psychological reactance

22
Conflict and Face Issues
  • What triggers negative face threats?
  • Threat, order, warning, request, reminder,
    suggestion, advice, promise, expressions of
    admiration, envy, hated, lust
  • We can signal that we have weak negative face
  • Expressing thanks, accepting thanks, accepting an
    apology, accepting an excuse, accepting an offer

23
Other Face Concepts
  • Fellowship face
  • Need to be seen as a valued member of the group
  • Focus on cohesiveness, equal participation, etc.
  • Dont stand out from the others
  • Competence face
  • Our desire to be identified with a role
  • E.g. Im the computer expert. Im very competent
  • I want to be seen as reliable by my peers
  • Threaten defensiveness

24
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Protecting others autonomy face
  • Ask open-ended questions
  • Listen without judging
  • Explore options
  • Dont exclude others

25
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Facework
  • Establish/maintain impressions of ourselves to
    others support or deny the impressions that
    others are making
  • "the communicative strategies one uses to enact
    self-face and to uphold, support, or challenge
    another person's face" (Masumoto, Oetzel, Takai,
    Ting-Toomey, Yokochi, 2000).

26
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Preventive faceworktactics
  • See the situation from the others perspective
  • How does the issue affect the other and the
    others self-image?
  • Initially (at least) accept what the other person
    says at face value
  • Accept the other persons right to change his or
    her mind
  • Avoid face-threatening topics use communication
    practices that minimize threats to face.

27
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Preventive faceworktactics
  • Use politeness and disclaimers
  • Hedging indicate uncertainty and receptivity to
    suggestions
  • Cognitive disclaimer asserting that the behavior
    is reasonable and under control, despite
    appearances
  • Credentialing indicating you have good reasons
    and appropriate qualifications for your
    statements
  • Sin license indicating that this is an
    appropriate occasion to violate the rule not a
    character defect.
  • Appeal for suspended judgment asking the other
    to withhold judgment until it is explained.

28
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Supportive Facework helps reinforce the way the
    other is presenting himself or herself
  • 1. Do I try to make the other feel important?
  • 2. Do I try to make the other look good to other
    people?
  • 3. Do I try to make the other think that they are
    winning?
  • 4. Do I try to make the other feel secure?
  • 5. Do I try to make the other believe that I am
    honest and trustworthy?

29
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Corrective Facework statements meant to
    ameliorate the effect of face-threatening
    messages
  • 1. People overestimate their own level of
    cooperation and underestimate the other persons
  • 2. Scanning checking out the perceptions created
  • Question the other to confirm
  • 3. Explaining used when we perceive that the
    other has not taken our message in the way we
    meant it

30
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Repair Sequence (ritual)
  • 1. Offending situation the others behavior is
    perceived as intentional and hurtful
  • Whether accurate or not
  • Face threatening hard to continue until
    addressed
  • 2. Reproach request for an explanation of an
    offense from the one offended
  • Verbal, nonverbal, aggressive, passive-aggressive
  • If perception (step 1) is inaccurate, this can be
    a trigger

31
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Repair Sequence (continued)
  • 3. Remedy (account)
  • Refuse to act or even note (most unsatisfying)
  • Provide an account (explanation excuse or
    justification)
  • Concessions admit the offenders guilt and offer
    restitution
  • Apologies are admissions of blameworthiness and
    regret on the part of the offender
  • supplied by an offender
  • 4. Acknowledgment evaluation of the account
    supplied by the one offended
  • Were even, were OK, I accept your reason
  • Or, rejection of the remedy

32
Image Restoration Remedies
  • Excuse
  • Impairment, diminished responsibility, scapegoat
    status, victim of sad circumstances, etc.
  • Justification
  • No harm occurred, it was deserved, other people
    do it, I meant well, I had a responsibility to do
    it
  • Concession
  • I admit it, let me make it up
  • Apology
  • I admit it, and I truly regret it

Weak restore
Strong restore
33
Apologies
  • Admission of blameworthiness AND regret
  • Request for pardon, self-castigation, help
  • Offender wants to restore positive face
  • Appearance of a genuine apology can lessen
    emotional state of those with high trait
    hostility

34
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Conflict And Impression Management In Cyberspace
  • Attractiveness of friends who leave messages on
    persons wall in Facebook affects impressions of
    that persons attractiveness
  • Comments made by others about a person on his or
    her profile are more influential in creating
    impressions than self-made statements
  • Facebook used more by socially adept people to
    strengthen relationships than by socially anxious
    people to create them

35
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Responding to Others
  • Results indicate that apologies and/or offering
    some corrective action were seen as the most
    appropriate and effective ways to restore ones
    image

36
Conflict and Face Issues
  • Conflict And Impression Management In Cyberspace
  • In their study of online conflict, Smith,
    McLaughlin, and Osborne found that few people
    replied to reproaches and seldom completed the
    traditional repair sequence
  • Negative conflict behaviors were more frequent in
    CMC than FTF
  • Higher levels of avoidance and lower levels of
    forcing in computer-mediated negotiation

37
Forgiveness
  • Chapter 10

38
Forgiveness
  • Is there an event in your life that you find
    difficult to forgive?
  • Why?
  • What would it take for you to forgive?
  • What are the consequences of forgiving?
  • What have been the consequences of not forgiving?

39
Forgiveness
  • Most important part of conflict management
  • Only way to transform the meaning of the event
  • Only way to minimize the likelihood of repeating
    the event
  • Repeats become more destructive with each
    iteration
  • Not needed in every conflict situation
  • Depends on intimacy of relationship, degree of
    outcome importance
  • Conscious decision to reduce our focus on the
    event
  • We decide not to change the future based on the
    past
  • We decide to move beyond victimization

40
Forgiveness
  • Reconciliation
  • The process of restoring a damaged relationship
    (creating a new one, more accurately)
  • Forgiving and reconciling are not the same
  • We can forgive, but choose not to reconcile (or
    even let them know we forgive)
  • Forgiving and reconciling are not one-time events
  • We tend to return to them cognitively and
    emotionally
  • We deal with different parts over time
  • Competent conflict managers use forgiveness and
    reconciliation strategies effectively
  • Develop a repertoire of responses

41
Without competence in forgiveness and
reconciliation skills, relationships will end
  • And generate history, feelings, and other effects
    that persist

42
Forgiveness
  • Relational Transgressions
  • Concern core relational rules
  • Expectations about the way we should behave
    toward others and the way they should behave
    toward us
  • We assume a truth bias toward friends and lovers.
  • Deception deliberately altering information to
    change a persons perceptions
  • We assume a helping orientation toward friends
    and lovers
  • Violations leave strong emotional residues

43
Forgiveness
  • Forgiveness cognitive process letting go of
    feelings of revenge and desires to retaliate.
  • Aids in transforming the meaning of the event, or
    changing the way we view the event and the person
  • Reframing is key
  • Unforgiveness cognitive process not letting go
    of feeling of revenge and retaliation
  • Revenge an eye for an eye.
  • Reconciliation behavioral process actions to
    restore a relationship or create a new one
  • Distinct from forgiveness.

44
Forgiveness
  • Advantages Of Forgiveness
  • Mental Health
  • Raises self-esteem and lowers depression
  • Physical Health
  • Unforgiveness creates stress harsh long-term
    effects
  • Higher levels of pain for trait-based
    unforgiveness
  • Widely demonstrated links to cardiovascular
    health
  • Why dont we forgive?
  • Other hasnt admitted wrongdoing, apology
    insincere, desire to be a victim
  • Empathy skill leads to higher levels of
    forgiveness
  • Ageyounger (college age study) harder
  • Dont know how, no support

45
Forgiveness
  • Working through forgiveness
  • Can be taught its a skill
  • Levels of Forgiveness
  • Forgiveness for own sake (its healthy, feels
    better)
  • Forgiveness because of empathy understanding
    that the other needs forgiveness, or
  • Forgiveness for the sake of the relationship (not
    necessarily the other or self)
  • Higher level of empathy he/she is like me
    (difficult)
  • Even higher level of empathy I am like him/her
    (most difficult)
  • I could do this to others, too

46
Forgiveness
  • Working Through Reconciliation (optional)
  • Levels of Reconciliation
  • No reconciliation repression, victim status, low
    trust, bitterness
  • Possible reconciliation
  • Usually after admission
  • Conditional reconciliation
  • After expression of regret and apology
  • Processual reconciliation
  • Some attempt at a remedy
  • Restoration

47
Forgiveness
  • Working Through Reconciliation (cont.)
  • Steps toward Reconciliation
  • 1 Account and apology (we usually need these to
    proceed)
  • 2 Acceptance of account and apology or its
    absence
  • We must reframe the other and the event
  • 3 Forgiveness may or may not be verbally
    communicated
  • We may simply act as though its forgiven
  • 4 Transforming the relationship, if desired
  • Less intimate, more intimate, different type of
    relationship
  • 5 Actions confirm forgiveness and reconciliation
  • Beware negative self-fulfilling prophecies we
    can create the behaviors in the other we expect
    to see
  • Create positive self-fulfilling prophecies

48
Forgiveness
  • Working Through Reconciliation (cont.)
  • Forgiveness and reconciliation feed each other in
    ongoing relationships
  • After forgiving one another, we tell each other
    that the act is forgiven, which allows us to act
    without reference to the offense
  • In turn, we feel better about our relationship
    and can talk about our relationship without
    reference to the offense.
  • In turn, actions confirm words which creates the
    reality of our forgiveness.

49
(No Transcript)
50
Forgiveness
  • Moving Beyond Victimization
  • We tend to want to find someone to blame (not
    ourselves)
  • Sometimes, we must forgive without communication
  • When reconciliation is not safe, not possible,
    not desired by you. Not desired by the
    transgressor, etc.
  • In these cases, any expression of anger, hurt,
    etc. may make it worse we cant risk the
    vulnerability
  • We learn to move on drop the baggage
  • Seeking revenge hurts us more
  • We MUST do this if we want to continue
    interaction
  • Sometimes realize that, like us, the other is
    doing the best that he/she can

51
Forgiveness
  • Seeking forgiveness (offender initiated)
  • Offender experiences feelings of shame and guilt
    for the offense
  • Offender makes a decision to seek forgiveness
  • Offender expresses remorse and repentance
  • Victim should recognize that this is humbling, it
    puts the offender in a vulnerable position
  • Final stage of seeking forgiveness waiting
  • Difficult
  • Tell ourselves that we did all we could

52
Mediation
  • Chapter 11

53
Mediation
  • Shift from dealing with our own conflicts to
    helping others resolve theirs
  • When should we (do we) intervene?
  • When people cant/wont do it themselves
  • Mediator/mediation is not
  • Conciliation, ombudsperson, arbitration, and
    adjudication/litigation
  • Mediators are unbiased third parties who
    facilitate communication between conflicting
    parties
  • Parties work out their own agreement

54
Dispute
  • When those involved cannot work out the conflict
    by themselves
  • A conflict does not necessarily result in a
    dispute

55
Why Mediation or other ADRs?
  • High case load in the courts
  • Less expensive than litigation
  • Often compulsory
  • Greater level of confidentiality
  • Greater level of control of those involved in the
    process

56
Mediation
  • Typical mediation
  • 1. One or both disputants seek mediation or a
    mediator talk them into it.
  • 2. The mediator brings the disputants together
    and makes an opening statement.
  • 3. Following the opening statement, each person
    takes a few minutes to describe the dispute from
    his or her point of view without interruption.
  • 4. The mediator finds common ground on which to
    build agreement.
  • 5. The mediator writes up the final agreement.
  • 6. The mediator ends the mediation.

57
Mediation
  • Terms
  • ADR alternatives to dispute resolution
  • Adjudication neutral judge and jury hear both
    sides and decide (ADR)
  • Either side can appeal
  • Arbitration neutral third party hears both sides
    and makes the decision (ADR)
  • More binding that adjudication (cant appeal)
  • Ombudsperson an ADR where one side has a person
    that cuts through the red tape (usually when
    dealing with governmental agencies)
  • Caucus when the mediator talks to one side alone

58
Mediation
  • Conciliation (ADR) neutral third party practices
    shuttle diplomacy by traveling back and forth
    between conflicting parties unable to meet
  • Mediation (ADR) neutral third party facilitates
    communication between the conflicting parties
    they work out mutually acceptable agreement
  • Mediators have no decision-making power

59
Mediation
  • Mediation reduces the BATNA of the disputants
  • Mediators help to restore communication and
    normalize relations
  • Mediation allows for full participation by the
    conflicting parties
  • Mediation has a high success rate (80)
  • Formal versus Informal Mediation
  • Formal satisfactory agreements are often worked
    out at a single session lasting 13 hours
  • Informal people can help others without their
    being formally trained and certified.

60
Mediation
  • The Role of the Mediator
  • The principle of three effect
  • Two parties encourages win/lose. Third person
    signals the public/social attention (face
    pressure)
  • A mediator has no decision-making power regarding
    the outcome of the mediation
  • The mediator should develop a subjective
    neutrality
  • Honors the validity and truth of each persons
    story without deciding who is right or wrong
  • Mediators must maintain confidentiality
  • Mediators must give equal time/treatment
  • Mediators should not be close with either party

61
Mediation
  • Mediators must be competent in communication
  • Be descriptive, not judgmental (e.g., It seems
    like you are raising your voice, versus It
    sounds like you are angry)
  • Be specific (e.g., You say you are bothered you
    are by your colleagues work habits. What
    specific habits?)
  • Focus only on behaviors that one can change
  • Give timely feedback when it is requested, as
    close as possible to the behavior being discussed
  • Speak only for yourself (e.g., I understand you
    to say I take it that you feel I want you
    both to I prefer to keep my opinions to
    myself.)
  • Check what you see or hear with the other parties

62
Mediation
  • Mediators encourage cooperation and discourage
    competition between the parties
  • Mediators as Communication Rules Enforcers
  • Rules are obligations and prohibitions (what we
    may and may not say in certain situations).
  • In opening statements, mediators define the
    communication rules for the mediation.
  • They enforce those communication rules.
  • They steer the disputants through the steps of
    mediation.
  • They manage the tone of the discussion.
  • They ask disputants to change focus when needed
    keep them on task

63
Typical rules
  • Taking turns to talk without interruptions
  • Talking without expressing hostility to one
    another
  • Creating a positive climate no put-downs
  • Focusing on the future (what the parties will do)
    rather than the past (what was done)
  • Striving for a winwin solution (no one feeling
    dissatisfied or agreeing to something
    unacceptable)
  • Focus on solving the problem rather than
    attacking or blaming the other person
  • Being honest and sharing thoughts and feelings
    without fear of criticism or publicity
  • Adhering to time constraints/other rules set by
    mediator

64
The Mediation Process
  • One or both disputants seek mediation, or
    mediators talk them into it (the intake process).
  • The mediators bring the disputants together and
    make an opening statement, which includes
  • Participation in mediation is voluntary and the
    mediator or conflicting parties may terminate it
    at any time
  • The mediator is unbiased
  • What is said in mediation is confidential
  • That the goal is a written agreement with which
    both parties are satisfied or at least comfortable

65
Mediation opening statements
  • That the mediator is an unbiased facilitator of
    discussion and does not make decisions
  • That the parties should talk to and look at one
    another rather than at the mediator.
  • That the parties will take turns talking without
    interruptions (nonverbal either)
  • That the parties must adhere to time constraints
    set by the mediator
  • That the parties strive to solve the problem
    rather than attack, blame, express hostility

66
Mediation opening statements
  • That a positive climate with no put-downs will be
    enforces
  • That focus will be on the future
  • That they can openly share thoughts and feelings
    without fear of criticism or publicity
  • That a winwin solution is the target (define as
    no one feeling dissatisfied or agreeing to
    something either party finds unacceptable)
  • That the parties agree to abide by additional
    rules as announced by the mediator during the
    session.

67
Mediation
  • Following the opening statements, each person to
    takes a few minutes to describe the dispute
    without interruption
  • Sometimes it is useful for mediators to caucus
  • Their may be some information that one disputant
    doesnt want to reveal in the presence of the
    other
  • Caucus should be offered to the other side
  • Find common ground (to build agreement on)
  • Use fractionation, framing (posing good questions
    with no blame language), reframing (mediators
    restate negatively loaded, biased, or accusatory
    statements)
  • Helps the disputants look at the issues
    differently

68
Mediation
  • Final Agreement
  • A list of behavioral commitments that enumerates
    specific observable actions each party needs to
    take to fulfill the agreement
  • Ending the Mediation
  • Each disputant receives a copy of the
    handwritten, signed agreement. If appropriate,
    the mediators set up a date for reviewing and
    evaluating the agreement
  • Mediators thank the parties and wish them well
  • Unlike formal mediation, in informal mediation,
    no need to file paperwork, have typewritten
    agreements, etc.

69
http//www.law.harvard.edu/media/2001/09/14/pon_st
ld.mov
  • VIDEO Typical Mediation

70
Chapter 12
  • Managing Conflict from a Theoretical Perspective

71
Conflict Theory
  • Understanding theories
  • Not the same as having the skills
  • Theories allow us to carry skills from one
    situation to another
  • Allow us to apply them appropriately within
    situations
  • A skill is a learnable behavior, a person can
    improve it

72
Intrapersonal Theories of Conflict
  • Psychodynamic Theory
  • People experience conflict because of
    intrapersonal (internal, psychological,
    emotional, mental) states
  • Helps explain
  • Displaced conflict acted out over the right
    issue, but with the wrong person/thing
  • Often a more socially acceptable or weaker target
    (if the actual target is highly valued or has
    greater power)
  • Misplaced conflict acted out with the right
    person, but over the wrong issue
  • Often over safe rather than suppressed issue
  • Overblown conflict conflict receives more
    attention than it really deserves
  • Often to release pent-up energy

73
Psychodynamic Theory
  • The id
  • The unconscious aspect that contains everything
    that is inherited, present at birth, or fixed in
    the constitution
  • Contains the libido
  • The source of instinctual energy, which demands
    discharge through various channels
  • Operates on the pleasure principle
  • Tension-reduction process tension from a bodily
    need is translated into a psychological wish to
    reduce the tension
  • Seek pleasure and avoid pain only satisfaction
    no regard for the cost of doing so

74
Psychodynamic Theory
  • The id is in conflict with the superego
  • Perfects and civilizes behavior
  • Suppress all unacceptable id urges
  • Two components
  • Ego ideal the internalized idea of what a person
    would like to be
  • Conscience morals and other judgments concerning
    correct and incorrect behavior

75
Psychodynamic Theory
  • Ego mediates between the id and the superego
  • Governed by the reality principle satisfies
    the id's desires in realistic and socially
    appropriate ways
  • Weighs the costs and benefits before acting
  • Effects identified by psychodynamic theory
  • Anxiety tension when people perceive danger
  • Repression another defense mechanism when we try
    not to think about the situation
  • Frustration results from the internal battle
    between the id and superego that often erupts
    into conflict with others
  • Sources tension, stress, insecurity, anxiety,
    hostility, sexual urges, or depression.

76
Attribution Theory
  • People act in conflict situations because of
    inferences they make about others based on their
    behavior
  • Internal attributions about another
  • E.g. e.g. he hates, shes stupid, hes evil,
    shes angry, etc.
  • Often results in name-calling (you cheat, idiot,
    lazy, good for nothing, etc.) and assigning blame
    (its all your fault)
  • External attributions for oneself
  • A way to avoid blame (its my parents fault that
    I am this way, I cant help that I didnt go to
    the right school)
  • Avoid giving credit to others where it is due
    (e.g. you got the job because you graduated from
    the right school)

77
Attribution Theory
  • Fundamental attribution error overestimate the
    internal factors and underestimate the external
    factors in perceptions in others behaviors
  • E.g. Look at what Sue is doing shes obviously
    got no talent talking to customers
  • Instead of Sue having difficulty making a
    connection with customers today. I wonder is
    shes feeling the stress from her recent divorce
  • Self-serving bias When we assign our successes
    to internal factors and our failures to external
    factors
  • E.g. I was really good today with my employees
    I have great people skills. I had no luck
    reaching Mike, though hes not a team player

78
Social Exchange Theory
  • We make decisions based on cost/benefit analyses
    of outcomes of relationships
  • Benefits and costs material, social, emotional,
    intellectual, etc.
  • Relationship viewed as a positive is more likely
    to progress towards greater depth/breadth
  • OUTCOME BENEFITS COSTS
  • Perception issue, not reality
  • CL comparison level threshold of perceived
    happiness from a relationship
  • Depends on our/their history
  • Sequence matters (when the good/bad event occurs)
  • Trends matter (a perceived increase/decrease of
    good/bad events)
  • SATISFACTION OUTCOME - CL
  • Perception issue, not reality

79
Social Exchange
  • CLalt comparison level of alternatives
  • How attractive are other choices?
  • What will be the outcome of continuing?
  • Optimum situation when both parties find that
    outcome gt CLalt gt CL
  • If so, relationship will become deeper
  • Alternatives affected by extrinsic and intrinsic
    factors
  • Extrinsic (outside influences) e.g. where you go
    to school
  • Intrinsic (internal influences) e.g. you are shy
  • DEPENDENCE OUTCOME - COMPARISON LEVEL OF
    ALTERNATIVES
  • Perception issue, not reality

80
Conflict Theory
  • Social Exchange applied to conflict management
  • Third party intervention may lead a person to
    examine the current relationship and perceive
    inequity in it creating conflict
  • Mediator can reframe issues to redo the math

81
Group Conflict
  • Chapter 13

82
How Does Group Conflict Differ?
  • Group conflicts are unique
  • Type of interdependence among the parties
  • Organizational in nature
  • Workplace relationships (bossemployee,
    colleagues, department heads, employeepublic,
    etc.)
  • We are better deception-detectors at work
  • Familiarity, but less truth bias
  • Group conflicts are distinct from
  • Formal grievances must be resolved by third
    parties (e.g. human resources specialists)
  • Litigation lawsuits and issues involving
    regulatory agencies that oversee an organization.

83
The Nature of Conflict in Groups
  • Types of Conflict
  • Instrumental/task disagreement between
    supervisors and subordinates or among members of
    a team over how to get a job done
  • Relationship power, trust, supportiveness,
    competition, and IP relationship rules
  • Including those in task-oriented groups
  • Identity when face issues are threatened
  • Process disagreements over the management style
  • Lack of agreement on departmental or
    organizational process goals

84
The Nature of Conflict in Groups
  • Information processing perspective
  • Assumes that conflict has a curvilinear
    relationship with cognitive flexibility, creative
    thinking, and problem-solving abilities
  • At low levels of conflict, groups may not
    experience enough stress to think actively may
    ignore important information.
  • At high levels of conflict, groups are unable to
    process information well performance suffers

85
Group Conflict
  • Conflict acts as a group developer (e.g.
    Tuckmans stages)
  • Forming confusion over expectations,
    uncertainties, power, identity, inclusion,
    boundary-testing. Conflict is withheld or poorly
    managed
  • Not much gets done (no productive conflict)
  • Storming conflict between belonging and
    independence. Confusion about goals and purpose,
    leadership model. Can be short or long
  • Some groups never leave (minutia-driven)
    maturity issue
  • Can be very unpleasant to those averse to
    conflict
  • Tolerance of others is key to successfully moving
    on
  • Leaders must not be too restrictive at this stage

86
Group Conflict
  • Tuckmans stages
  • Norming all systems operational productivity
    emerges. Members accept roles, purposes, norms
  • Trust and structure stage
  • Unity emerges start acting like a team, not
    individuals
  • Performing rare Members are very
    interdependent, yet are very autonomous little
    supervision required
  • Dissent is both allowed and welcomed (provided it
    is presented in the accepted fashion)
  • Conflict focuses individuals on outcome-driven
    action
  • Termination mandatory or voluntary dissolution
    of the group
  • Even the loss of a single member can shift the
    group into another stage

87
When Conflict Creates Poor Outcomes
  • Role Conflict
  • Not just a job assignment the expected
    characteristics of the person who fills the role.
  • Formal role from the assigned position in a
    group or organization
  • Organizational chart or chain of command
    reflects these formal roles prescribes who is
    supposed to report to whom.
  • Informal roles in groups and organizations arise
    from the communication and interactions
  • Both cause conflict

88
Group Conflict
  • Role conflict
  • Depends of the type of role
  • Task (usually formal) asking for and giving
    information, opinions
  • Promotive
  • Maintenance (formal or informal) confirming
    others, supportive messages
  • Promotive
  • Disruptive (informal) self-centered, diverts
    group off task
  • Could be task and maintenance roles that do not
    serve the outcome they are not promotive, they
    are disruptive

89
Too much cohesiveness Groupthink
  • when concurrence-seeking becomes so dominant
    in a cohesive in-group that it tends to override
    realistic appraisals of alternative courses of
    action (Janis, 1982, p.9)

90
Groupthink Symptoms
  • Illusion of invulnerability (optimism)
  • Relieves us of responsibility to make difficult
    rational decisions. Also, self-esteem and
    consistency issues
  • Rationalization (especially negative information)
  • Illusion of morality
  • Stereotyping of outgroup members and leaders (us
    against them thinking)
  • Peer pressure dissent against the group members
    that disagree
  • Self-censorship
  • Illusion of unanimity (silence is approval bias)
  • Mindguarding (usually self-appointed)

91
Group Conflict
  • Abilene Paradox
  • Group actions that no one (members) wanted to
    take
  • Action anxiety we often act based on what we
    believe others expect us to do
  • Even if we disagree, or were wrong about the
    others. Supported by
  • Negative fantasies (perceived risk) unrealistic
    visualizations of harmful effects resulting from
    acting the way we think we should excuse for not
    acting.
  • Fear of separation ostracism is the most
    powerful punishment
  • Real risk operates no differently from perceived
    risk
  • Confusion of fantasies and reality we make the
    fantasy reality (self-fulfilling prophecy)
    Fantasized risk becomes real

92
Group Conflict
  • Lucifer Effect
  • Zimbardo (Stanford Prison Experiment)
  • Usually in unusual, high pressure situations
  • Circumstances overwhelm the individual
  • The point where we cross the line
  • Often occur when constraints are released
  • Rules are unquestioned we obey without thinking
  • We cannot separate me from the role expected of
    us
  • Roles we play become so entwined we no longer
    think about what we are doing or what others
    expect of us

93
Group Conflict
  • Strategies to Resolve Conflict (chapter 3
    issues)
  • Contend (compete)
  • Collaborate
  • Avoid
  • Compromise
  • Accommodate
  • Bias toward cooperation leads most people to try
    to collaborate

94
Group Conflict
  • Relationship issue conflict is best avoided
  • Research avoiding responses to
    relationship-oriented conflicts higher levels of
    team performance
  • Contending or collaborating responses lowered
    team performance overall
  • Avoiding responses better for two reasons
  • Relationship conflict is difficult to settle to
    mutual satisfaction
  • Cooperative and understanding unlikely to solve
    the problem makes it bigger and intractable
  • Collaborating and contending responses direct
    team members away from their tasks and teamwork
  • Focus on interpersonal relations team
    functioning and effectiveness suffers

95
Group Conflict
  • Best Practices
  • Develop a habit of cooperation manage (not
    maximize) group cohesiveness
  • Groups that trust one another handle conflict in
    more productive terms.
  • Avoid, at least initially, relationship-oriented
    conflicts
  • Better resolved over time as team members come to
    know one another better.
  • Approach process and task-related conflicts in an
    expedient manner, favor collaborating strategies
    as a way to explore alternatives for future
    behavior.

96
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Chapter 14

97
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Effects of organizational conflict
  • Lowered productivity
  • Less creativity
  • Less innovation
  • Prolonged, unresolved conflict
  • Negative consequences for team members health

98
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Organizational Diversity and Conflict
  • Diversity-based conflict when personal
    characteristics (cultural, ethnic, racial, etc.)
    are the source
  • Social category characteristics (age, ethnicity,
    gender, etc.) and informational characteristics
    (work experience, education, values, beliefs,
    etc.) contribute to diversity-based conflict.
  • Civility as a Response to conflict
  • Attitude of respect toward others manifested in
    our behavior toward them not predicated on how
    we feel about them in particular
  • How we act, not think or feel

99
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Civility
  • Mindfulness of the dignity of the other person in
    your sphere at all times
  • The sum of the many sacrifices we are called to
    make for the sake of living together
  • Rules for civility at work
  • Best words when caught in an unexpected,
    emotional-charged situation no words at all.
  • Use words respectful of the specific listener to
    whom they are addressed (not some generic rule)
  • Respect the reality of the situation use
    temperate, accurate, non-inflammatory, words when
    describing or commenting on ideas, issues, or
    persons

100
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Civility
  • Use objective, nondiscriminatory language that
    respects the uniqueness of all individuals.
  • Respect your listeners by using clean language
    all the time on the job
  • Civility is two commitments
  • (1)Do no harm to others harm (2) do good for
    others.
  • When we disagree, civility requires that we be
    honest about our differences manage rather than
    suppress or ignore them
  • Civility requires that we come into the presence
    of others with a sense of gratitude, rather than
    duty and obligation.

101
Managing Organizational Conflict
  • Work-life conflict
  • A. Worklife conflict a balance between ones
    personal life and the demands of work. Includes
  • Hours
  • Vacation
  • Childcare
  • Wireless technology
  • Time
  • Roles at work vs. roles at home

102
Workplace bullying From Playground to Boardroom
  • A frequent, enduring abusive interaction
    distinguished by targets inability to defend
  • Bullying has four specific features
  • Intensity
  • Repetition
  • Duration
  • Power disparity.
  • Bullying intends to control or harm others
    through insults, gossip, criticism, ridicule,
    etc.
  • Bullying is a pattern of abuse that persists
  • The longer the bullying, the greater the harm
    (physical, mental, emotional)

103
Managing Bullies
  • Reverse discourse
  • Tactics of responding to the bully through
    communicative means (e.g. turning an insult into
    a compliment)
  • Use of lawyers, outside experts
  • Formal or informal grievance against the bully
  • E.g. the confrontational ritual presented in
    chapter 2
  • Doesnt always work, particularly at work
  • Subversive (dis)obedience passive-aggressive
    behavior (chapter 3)
  • Retaliation hostile gossip and/or fantasies for
    physically harming or killing the bully

104
Managing Bullies
  • Psychological detachment
  • Creating a sense of being away from work
  • Collective voice
  • When employees talk amongst themselves about
    their experiences and what they can do about them
  • Exodus. works well when one is only in a
    temporary situation
  • A person can quit, make a threat to quit, put in
    for a transfer, or aid others in quitting

105
Social Conflict
  • Chapter 15

106
Social Conflict Introduction
  • Clash of different and conflicting value systems
  • Intractable issues
  • Transcends those involved
  • Clash of social or cultural, religious,
    political, or economic philosophies
  • Each party doesn't understand why the other
    doesnt get it
  • Slogans and simple answers substitute for
    arguments
  • Can descend into violent behavior

107
_at_Social Conflict
  • Intractable issues appear like normal conflict
  • Fail to agree on their goals see activities as
    incompatible feel relational rules have been
    broken
  • Intractable issues add a difference
  • Become entrenched in right and wrong issues
  • These fundamental assumptions operate below
    awareness
  • This is pluralism
  • The socio-cultural reality of discrepant
    worldviews, ideologies, and moral frameworks,
    existing side by side
  • We characterize people as other, strange,
    different from ourselves
  • Fueled by distrust and dislike
    self-perpetuating difficult to bring to any kind
    of resolution.

108
Social Conflict
  • Understanding intractable issues
  • When conflicts become too entrenched,
    participants do not desire communication with the
    others
  • Resort to static evaluations name-calling
    stereotyping
  • When involved in intractable conflict
  • We addresses the choir eloquently, with
    elaboration and nuance
  • When address outsiders in a simplified and
    defensive way
  • They become the aggressor, oppressor
  • Violence is sometimes viewed as necessary for
    self-protection

109
Social Conflict
  • Intractable issues often involve
  • States or other actors with a long sense of
    historical grievance, and a strong desire to
    redress or avenge
  • A long period of time
  • Intangibles identity, sovereignty, values,
    beliefs
  • Polarized perceptions of hostility and enmity
  • Behavior that is violent and destructive
  • Buffer states that exist between major power
    blocks or civilizations
  • Resistance to management efforts
  • History of failed peacemaking efforts

110
Social Conflict
  • Silenceignoring the needs of the other and the
    other entirely
  • Group-based hatred when person or group
  • Seeks to deny person or group their identity
  • Seeks to deny person or group security, or the
    ability to pursue goals
  • E.g. the homeless seeking shelter, abortion
    protestors blocking the entrance of clinics
  • Seeks to put themselves ahead of others in the
    social, political, or economic structure
  • Seeks to control resources in a winlose conflict
  • Where no expansion of resources is possible
    (Israel and Palestine example)

111
Social Conflict
  • Patriotism and nationalism
  • Patriotism love of ones country and a
    willingness to defend it from invaders
  • Nationalism love of ones nation as it will be
    once
  • It has exterminated all its enemies
  • Becomes totally unified
  • Achieves its grand purpose of world-historical
    destiny

112
Theories of social conflict
  • Critical theory
  • Understanding situations by analyzing power
    relations between participants
  • Uncover oppression, exploitation, and injustice
  • Oppression one group or set of groups are able
    to dominate and exploit another group or set of
    groups
  • Exploitation economic, physical, or
    psy
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