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Can Tony Blair succeed in the ultimate mediation role?

As has been widely reported, outgoing British prime minister, Tony Blair has now obtained his first post-premiership role as an international Middle East peace envoy. 

Two days ago, Blair was formally named special envoy for the Middle East in a bid backed by President Bush and his role will be to focus on narrow and technical topics rather than broader issues related to a final Israeli-Palestinian peace settlement, officials said. His assignment is to increase humanitarian aid, strengthen the Palestinian economy and improve the governance of the territories.

This role will no doubt entail use of mediation skills and in my view it is probably one of the ultimate mediation roles.

The question is do I think whether Tony Blair is up to the job.

In their book on mediation, entitled "International Mediation - The Art of Business Diplomacy " Eileen Carroll & Karl Mackie identify a series of a attributes which one should look for in a mediator.

Let us look at some of the key ones and see how Tony Blair fares under the attributes listed:

Background , Status  & Credibility- With a reputation as the  former British Prime Minister who has enjoyed a great deal of experience on the world stage, he is eminently qualified under this heading. With the support of the Americans who will no doubt be integral for any success of Middle Eastern peace agreement, Blair does have the gravitas to get the job done. Tick.

Intellectual Rigour - Even political opponents of Blair would recognise his intelligence. Irrespective of ones views on the quality of his regime, the most successful Labour Prime Minister for winning 3 general elections is testament to that.  Tick.

Integrity - Hugely controversial due to the Iraq war but it is significant that the arch Unionist, Dr Ian Paisley praised Blair at the end of Tony Blair's last appearance at Parliament yesterday. Fundamentally parties who deal with him at a negotiating level seem to respect him. Said against that, I am not sure if the new British prime minster would rate his integrity that highly. Take your pick.   

Independence - An intriguing aspect to the appointment due to Iraq war and with Hamas criticising the appointment. Said against that, Israel approve and so do mainstream Palestinians which in itself is a huge achievement. Tick.

Determination -A critical attribute in the mediator. I think his record in Northern Ireland is very good on the cv and for this reason is a tick.

Overall with his success in Northern Ireland(Did you ever think you would see Sinn Fein's Mark McGuiness and Dr Ian Paisley smiling at the same table together?), he seems eminently qualified for the role. 

Points of Weakness? - People may be overfamilar with him. In other words, I do not think a mediation role would work in the UK as he has polarised too many people due to the tribal nature of politics and the fact that his premiership was characterised by too much emphasis on media management. Frankly I think that he can do this role abroad but I am not sure how he would do a mediation role in the UK.

P.S 30/6/07 -Intersting article in the Telegraph today saying that Blair will have no power to mediate on peace. I suppose this calls into question my post on this being the ultimate mediation role. 

Delia Venables & Nick Holmes Newsletter is coming out

Two of the most respected technology experts within the UK legal sector are about to release their Internet  Newsletter for Lawyers namely that of Delia Venables and Nick Holmes.

It includes:

1. David Flint of Scottish firm MacRoberts looks at web 2.0 sites and how "social networking"  actually works. He considers Second Life from a legal viewpoint and describes some of the legal issues which are being raised by these sites. The  "life" may be imaginary, but the legal issues are real!

2. Domain names are part of the infrastructure of the internet and we use them all the time. Tim Brown gives a basic tutorial on how it all works.  He also looks at current issues, including how the new top level domains like .pro, .mobi and .eu are going, and also covers the future  Telephone Number Mapping which will enable you to "dial" a website.

3. Many law firms advertise online, but Divorce-Online is now integrating online marketing with TV advertising and online video  marketing. They have prepared a video advert for YouTube, Google and Yahoo; video clips can be loaded onto video sharing websites for free although preparing the advert, as well as the TV advertising, can prove expensive.

There is much more than this and if you want to stay updated on technology issues this is essential reading.

Can technology trump ecological issues?

Dina Beach Lynch of Mediation Mensch has launched a meme tag which has already obtained an excellent response from Vickie Pynchon. The title is "Can Mediation Go Green?"

I am not going to add to Vickie's words on this save to observe that an interesting theory made in Ray Kurzweil's book "The Singularity is Near" is that the technological revolution will lead to humans being able to use technology to overturn the damage that they are now doing to the environment. Interesting theory - Does this have credibility?   

Would you like to mediate dangerously? Book Review of Kenneth Cloke's tour de force on mediation

Images_2 While this book was written in 2001, it was recommended to me by two American mediator friends of mine and leading bloggers (namelyVicki Pynchon & Diane Levin) as essential reading so therefore I took the opportunity to buy and read it.

What did I think of the book?

The author Kenneth Cloke is a Director of the Centre for Dispute Resolution in Santa Monica, California and is an experienced author, writer and his book is a call for action for mediators.

It represents a call to shift the boundaries of how to approach and deal with the mediation and to explore what really lies behind the conflict. 

He writes ”The greatest danger we face is our tendency to retreat from conflict, to accommodate and adapt to it. We quickly learn to expect nothing from our conflicts, to tolerate or anticipate them in our lives, to engage in them without self-reflection. This adaption to conflict means abandoning all possibility of growth, awareness, learning, improved relationships, deeper intimacy, better results, and personal or organisational transformation, all of which are lost when we are unwilling to risk open communication.”

Essentially this book is about the way that the mediation process can represent a source of growth, increased consciousness and spiritual growth for the disputing parties and the mediator.          

As he observes “Most people think of conflicts as disagreements over what they think, feel or want. Yet most arguments have little or nothing to do with the issues over which they battle.”

Cloke provides 18 definitions of conflict which represent a completely different way to see them.

Here are 2 of them which grabbed my attention.

Conflict is a way of opposing someone who represents a parent with whom we have not yet resolved our relationships. If the parties can recognise that the other person resembles or is behaving like someone from their family of origin, they may see they are really angry with someone else.”   

and

“Conflict is a lack of acceptance of ourselves that we have projected onto others, a way of blaming others for what we perceive as failures in our own lives. It reveals a need to hide behind roles or masks that do not reflect our authentic. As they accept themselves more fully, they become more accepting of others.”   

As he concludes, “What is common to all these definitions is that our conflicts begin and end with us, as well as the systems in which we operate. They have little to do with our opponents. As mediators, we can assist the parties in defining their conflict in alternative ways that allow them to perceive its deeper, more accurate meanings.”

And how does the mediator do all this?

In our experience, mediators need to elicit, conciliate, and facilitate, yet also to evaluate and direct parties in seeking resolution or transformation. They need to inquirer about deeper underlying issues and relationships. With the tacit permission of the parties, mediators can recommend concrete steps that will break the participants’ systems. While directive and facilitative styles rarely result in transformation, transformational and dangerous styles easily produce settlements

And the reason for taking such steps?

“Through these efforts, we can assist less-empowered parties to become more productive, intelligent ,and successful in completely ending their conflicts by addressing the underlying reasons that created them. In the long run, we will end disputes quicker with less damage and at lower cost than if we push for compromise, conciliation, and settlement for settlement’s sake.”   

This book is real challenge for the way in which we mediate and invites us to push the boundaries to a new level.

The contents of the book are split in two parts with the first section investigating the inner frontiers, the hidden personal recesses that limits our effectiveness and the second half examines our outer frontiers, the systems and structures that restrict our capacity to action what we learn internally.

Part One: the Inner Frontiers

1. The Dangers of Mediating
2. Suppression, Settlement and Resolution
3. Honesty and Empathy: Speaking the Unspeakable
4. When Helping Becomes a Hindrance
5. Exploring the Conflicts Within Ourselves
6. Mediating Fear, Apathy, Insanity and Dishonesty   
7. Dismantling the Desire For Revenge
8. The Magic of Forgiveness
9. The Significance of Spirit
10. Conflict as a Spiritual Path 

Part Two : The Outer Frontiers

11. Mediating Fascism and Oppressive Relationships
12. Power, Rights and Interests
13. Creating Responsible Communities
14. What’s Better Than The Rule of law
15. Shifting from Debate to Dialogue
16. Improving the Way we Fight
17. Transforming the System
18. The Politics of Conflict
19. Conflict Resolution System Design and the United Nations
20. Where Inner and Outer Frontiers Meet

The book really does give you food for thought on some of the key ethical issues which mediators face.

For example, Cloke explores spouse battering as an issue where as mediators we run the risk that by superficially resolving them, we run the risk of actually creating a new dispute.

He writes “If we recognise that the batterer’s apology is the first step in a new cycle of violence, it becomes clear that a precondition for the success of the mediation is that the cycle be broken at or before the point of apology. Yet most mediators, on hearing an apology, are likely to encourage the other accept it as a positive step toward resolution when in fact, acceptance merely allows the perpetrator to reveal their self-loathing and deny their contempt.”             

A more dangerous form of mediation would be to stop the apology before it is accepted and inquire into whether the apologiser has a pattern of apologising that cycles into repeated battering and to ask a series of probing ”dangerous” questions.

For us, the penalty of “peace at any price” is exacted from our spirit for having colluded in the continuation of potentially deadly behaviour.   

Whilst this book does provide practical questions which a mediator can apply, it is one which invites us to redefine what we are trying to get out of the mediation process for ourselves and the disputing parties.

As he writes “Mediators do not always approach conflict resolution, or their own conflicts, as opportunities for learning or journeys of transformation. Yet dangerous mediation requires us to do so……Doing so means practicing what we call “The Zen of Mediation,” which includes:

· Being as empathetic with both parties as possible, without losing ourselves

· Being as honest with both parties as possible, without being judgemental

· Being as committed as possible to revealing choices involving resolution and transformation, without caring one bit what either party chooses” 

This latter point is important is that one theme that I have noticed about mediators(and indeed ADR organisations), it is that often they will market themselves on the number of successful mediations that they have done yet should this be the role of the mediator?

According to Cloke this should not be so and invites to take the mediation as a spiritual path in which the mediator and the parties are fully engaged.

In summary, this is probably the best book that I have ever read on mediation not due to its practical knowledge that can be applied but because it really challenges you to think about what conflict is really about for the parties and for the mediator.

Lawyers - Do you know how to get the most out of the mediation hearing?

One of the books I am in the process of reading on mediation is "Mediation Advocacy" by Andrew Goodman & Alastair Hammerton.

One of the issues the authors explore is how lawyers get mediation advocacy wrong.

As they write, "Some advocates adopt entirely the wrong approach with their preparation by getting up the case as if it were for a trial, that is, by assuming they have to "prove" to the mediator or persuade him their client's case is better than that of the other side.....Some advocates dismiss mediation as a simple "horse trading" exercise, when in reality the process is much more sophisticated than they can see, and in this respect they fail to take advantage of what is now a highly developed and skilled exercise in meeting their client's true needs, or if particularly fortunate, gaining their client's desires."       

Podcast on mediation with Charon QC

CharonflagFurther to my 1st ever podcast with Charon QC which was completed in February of this year, I have returned to do another podcast this time on mediation with the maestro again. He asked some interesting and at times penetrating questions where we cover the whole ambit of mediation and ADR.

Cheers Charon QC.   

Do litigation lawyers need to be afraid of the growth of mediation?

Charles Russell is a top law UK firm and has a nice article on mediation written by its senior litigtors & partners,  John Sykes and Edward Craig entitled "Mediation in England & Wales - A very English Revolution."

The authors deal with whether solicitors are obstruting use of mediation and observe the following:

"Intransigence by solicitors had been identified as the reason, more than any other, for the slow take up of mediation in the United Kingdom”. 

Inevitably some of this intransigence could be attributed to a fear of losing revenue.  Indeed, whilst no law firm would willingly publicise a fall in work there is anecdotal evidence that the civil litigation departments of major law firms are less busy than they once were. Nevertheless the dip in business experienced by litigators is nowhere near as extreme as the fall in court cases might suggest.  This appears to be because solicitors have accepted that ADR is an integral part of the civil justice system and have realised that they need to adapt the new regime.  Solicitors are advising in areas they would not have considered previously.  At the pre-dispute stage, for example, litigation lawyers are becoming involved with contract drafting, advising on the possibility of using ADR clauses and devising increasingly sophisticated dispute escalation clauses.  They are also becoming involved in formulating corporate ADR policies for their clients."

Blawg Review -The potency of British law bloggers

Blawg Review is the blog carnival for everyone interested in law. A blog carnival is a travelling post about a topic or theme. For example, there's Carnival of the Capitalists, concerning business and economics, while Grand Rounds is about medicine and healthcare, and Blawg Review has topics discussed by lawyers, law students and law professors.

Each weekly issue of Blawg Review is made up of article submissions selected from the best recent law blog posts. The blogger that puts together the Blawg Review carnival each week is called the "host". You can find the weblogs of our future hosts linked in the sidebar on the right, along with links to all the previous presentations.

Congratulations are in order for the Editor of Blawg Review for this excellent post "The British Are Coming" and they are certainly coming to Blawg Review with the well known British bloggers, Nearly Legal due to host Blawg Review on July 2nd, and Corporate Blawg UK on July 9th this year.

Charon QC is also going to host on 7th January, 2008 and we have the promise of a podcast as well.

As the editor points out I have already hosted Blawg Review #78 - It was an honour(note the spelling, Ed).

5 ways to avoid costly litigation

Each month I send my a monthly ezine free to subscribers. Here is the current edition in blog format.

According to the mediation group, CE DR the estimated cost of conflict to UK business exceeds £30Bn a year, with damage to company reputation, exposure in the public domain, loss of customers, increases in staff turnover and missed opportunities resulting from the diversion of management time all cited as negative consequences. As a consequence there is every incentive for firms to avoid having disputes, but how do you avoid having them in the first place?

1 Think carefully about the type of people that you do business with. This can manifest in the types of organisations that you buy from and the kind of people you recruit to your firm. By way of example, I have dealt with one firm who has been struggling to enforce some non-solicitation clauses within an employment contract against some former members of staff. Despite the business being on strong legal ground they have been sucked into a costly dispute when the staff left the firm and started flouting the employment contract and approaching clients of the business. This could have been avoided if there had been effective recruitment processes in the first place.

2 Be the kind of organisation which does not create disputes. In my experience many firms are constantly embroiled in disputes and yet there are those who are not. Why? Unfortunately some management teams are just simply too prone to get into difficulties. If your firm has a commitment to engage in harmony with your staff and with business suppliers when issues become difficult, this is far more likely to avoid disputes arising in the first place. If the worst does happen and you have to conduct litigation, try to do so in a firm but composed way.

3 Seek to communicate effectively and consistently. One of the biggest reasons why disputes are created is due to a failure to keep a good dialogue with clients, staff and business associates. One way around this is to have a constant commitment to maintain informal dialogue with staff and business associates. By having consistent and informal management settings between management and others, this will minimise the prospect of a dispute taking place and misunderstandings resulting

4 Have management trained to face up to the dispute. Conflict can be difficult and many managers are not effective with dealing with conflict situations and typically perceive them to be bad news likely to interrupt their working day and quite possibly to threaten their future career prospects if news of the problem gets out. Dealing with conflict can be difficult with managers more likely to become aggressive (“fight”) with the other party or to climb into their shell (“flight”) until it becomes a crisis. By having management effectively trained to deal with disputes there is more potential to nip them in the bud and to avoid things getting worse later.

5 Have plain English and not too onerous legal terms. With respect to the law, on the one hand you need legal terms and conditions and employment contracts to protect your business interests but if terms are too oppressive not only will they create resentment from the other side (and can be a source of conflict with business suppliers as you seek to negotiate) but being too onerous terms there is the risk of the Court striking them out as unreasonable if you seek to enforce them.

If you wish to subscribe to the monthly ezines, please email me at justin(at)human-law(dot)co(dot)ukwith the word "subscribe."

Thank you to Victoria Pynchon at Settle it Now blog for giving me the idea to do this.

Blogging & Social Media book: make your contribution this month before the wiki goes private!

As many of you are aware,various legal bloggers and academics are working on a book aimed at lawyers called "Blogging & Other Social Media: Technology & Law".

The book is being written using a wiki, meaning that anyone can contribute. You can see the wiki here: http://humanlaw.pbwiki.com/

The deadline for submitting the first draft to the publishers, Gower Publishing, is approaching, and so this is a reminder to collaborators that the deadline for contributions is 30 June 2007.

The book is being co-edited by myself (Human Law), Andrew Mills and Alex Newson (both of Freeth Cartwright). The main contributors are:

Chapter 1, Blogs - Justin Patten, Alex Newson & Andrew Mills
Chapter 2, Other Social Media - Alex Newson & Andrew Mills
Chapter 3, Collaboration in a competitive environment - Martin Farley
Chapter 4, The Impact of Blogging - Justin Patten
Chapter 5, Blogging Policies & The Law - Peter Wainman & the Naked Law Team
Chapter 6, The Court of PR - Colin Samuels & Justin Patten
Chapter 7, Academia Blogging - Martin George
Chapter 8, Examples of Blogging Policies - Justin Patten & Alex Newson

After the expiry of the 30 June 2007 deadline, the wiki will be made private so that the first draft can be finalised for submission to Gower.

If you want to contribute, please come in soon.

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