Article Summary of "Transformative Mediation and Third-Party Intervention: Ten Hallmarks of a Transformative Approach to Practice" by Joseph P. Folger and Robert A. Baruch Bush
Citation: Joseph P. Folger and Robert A. Baruch Bush, "Transformative Mediation and Third-Party Intervention: Ten Hallmarks of a Transformative Approach to Practice," Mediation Quarterly 13:4 (Summer 1996) pp. 263-78.
This Article Summary written by: Tanya Glaser, Conflict Research Consortium
In this essay the authors describe ten characteristics of the
transformative approach to mediation. They first distinguish
between the goals and the practice of transformative mediation,
describing briefly the goals of transformative mediation. Drawing
upon the insight of experienced mediators, the authors then
explore in greater detail ten practices which mediators employ to
promote these transformative goals. The essay concludes with a
brief discussion of the usefulness of the authors' work in
describing these practices.
The Goals of Transformative Mediation
Two main goals of transformative mediation are to empower the
disputing parties, and to enhance each party's recognition of the
other. Recognition and empowerment are then key concepts in the
theory of transformative mediation. To empower the disputing
parties, the mediator seeks to "strengthen people's capacity
to analyze situations and make effective decisions for
themselves." [p. 264] Successful mediation should enhance
the parties' capacity for self- determination. By supporting
recognition, the mediator seeks to "strengthen people's
capacity to see and consider the perspectives of others."
[p. 264] Transformative mediation tries to enhance each party's
responsiveness to others.
These goals reflect two basic premises of transformative
mediation theory. First, the authors claim that mediation is more
than just a tool for settling disputes. Mediation has the
potential to produce valuable transformations in the character of
the participants. That is, participation in the mediation process
has the potential to make individuals more empowered and
responsive to others. Second, the authors claim that this
transformative potential can best be realized by mediators who
use certain attitudes and practices to guide the mediation
process.. The authors refer to these attitudes and practices as
"hallmarks" of the transformative approach to
mediation. The body of this articles is then devoted to
describing ten of these "hallmarks" in greater detail.
Hallmarks of Transformative Practice
One hallmark of effective transformative mediation is that the
mediator describes her role and objectives in terms of
empowerment and recognition. In his opening statement, the
mediator should explain that his task is to help the parties
reach a clearer understanding of their own interests and options,
and, if they so choose, to reach a better understanding of their
opponent. Settlement is presented as one possible outcome of the
mediation process. However, reaching a settlement is not
presented as the most important goal of mediation. A successful
session is described as one which produces improved understanding
or more clarity.
Mediators using the transformative approach to mediation will
also stress that responsibility for the outcome of the mediation
process lies with the parties. The mediator should seek to be
responsive rather than directive. This attitude will serve both
to empower the parties, and to keep the mediator's attention
focused on the transformative task. Within the transformative
approach, the mediator is responsible for identifying
opportunities for recognition and empowerment, and for helping
the parties to seize such opportunities. Refusing responsibility
for outcomes, and placing responsibility for decisions firmly
with the disputing parties, supports their sense of, and capacity
for, self-determination.
In a related attitude, the transformative mediator must
consciously refuse to be judgmental about the parties' views and
decisions. This attitude will again reinforce the parties' sense
of responsibility. It is not, of course, possible for the
mediator to refrain entirely from forming judgements about the
parties' views and decisions. However, the mediator who pursues
the transformative approach will keep her own limitations in
mind; as a third-party she cannot know more about the situation
than the parties who are actually embroiled in it.
The transformative process will be furthered if the mediator
takes an optimistic view of the parties' competence and motives.
This view will help the mediator maintain the attitudes discussed
above. If the mediator believes that the parties are incompetent
or malicious, the temptation to intervene and assume
responsibility for the outcome would be stronger. Also, seeing
the parties as good people caught in a difficult circumstance
supports the mediator's motivation to identify and point out
opportunities for recognition and empowerment.
In transformative practice, the mediator allows the parties to
express their emotions, and responds to those expressions of
emotion. Emotions often reveal unarticulated fears or beliefs:
frustration may be a response to uncertainty, anger may reveal
misunderstanding. By encouraging the parties to look for the
source of their feelings, the mediator may identify further
opportunities to encourage empowerment or recognition.
For similar reasons, parties' discussion of past events should
be supported and encouraged. Discussions of the parties' history
reveals the basis for their present understandings and views.
Reviewing the past often creates opportunities for parties to
reconsider their present views, and to then improve their
recognition of each other. Careful consideration of the parties'
own pasts can yield clearer self-understandings. Such clarified
understandings are empowering.
In a similar vein, the transformative mediator should accept
and help to explore the parties' uncertainties. Uncertainty or
unclarity on the parties' part presents an immediate opportunity
for empowerment. However, effective transformative practice
requires the mediator to allow the parties to explore their own
confusion for themselves. Patience and tolerance of ambiguity
will be helpful attitudes for the mediator to cultivate.
Effective transformative mediation requires the mediator to
stay closely focused on the presently occurring conflict
interaction. The mediator should not seek a distanced overview of
the problem during the mediation session. Such a view would tend
to support a more directive, solution-oriented approach to
mediation. Rather, the mediator should focus on the specific
statements of the parties within the mediation session. By paying
close attention to the flow of conversation, the mediator may
locate precisely points of confusion or misunderstanding, and
hence identify opportunities for empowerment or recognition.
This close focus within the mediation itself should be
balanced by a long-range view of conflict generally. The mediator
should view her intervention as simply one moment in an ongoing
process of conflict. She must recognize that the disputants'
interaction precedes the mediation intervention, and that some
form of interaction will continue after the intervention has
ended. Taking a long-range view of conflicts in general will help
the mediator to maintain her awareness of the limitations of any
one intervention. Maintaining this view is also crucial in
helping the mediator to avoid adopting a more directive approach,
and to avoid becoming foucused on the goal of settlement.
Finally, in order to maintain energy and motivation, the
mediator must learn to feel and share with the parties a sense of
success whenever empowerment and recognition occur, and even if
they only occur in small degrees. Transformative mediators
recognize first, that empowerment and recognition are valuable in
themselves. Secondly, they recognize that agreements and
settlements are generally only durable when they made by
empowered, responsive parties. Mediators who adopt a
transformative practice must then also adopt the motto,
"Small steps count."[p. 275]
Uses for the Hallmarks
The authors observe that these hallmarks of effective
transformative mediation practice will be useful tools for
training mediators in the transformative approach. They may also
be of help in developing transformation-oriented performance and
evaluation criteria. Such criteria will be needed if
transformative mediation is to be a viable alternative to the
presently more common settlement-oriented approach.
Review of these practices and attitudes also refutes a common
(albeit mistaken) criticism of transformative mediation. Critics
have charged that the transformative approach requires the
mediator to take an active role in directing and reshaping the
parties' characters. These descriptions of transformative
practices make it clear that the mediator is to play no such
role. While a character transformation is a hoped-for effect of
the mediation process, the mediator's role is strictly reactive
and supportive. When successful, the parties transform
themselves.
Finally, these patterns of practice may be used to explore the
extent to which transformative mediation is already in use. The
authors report finding transformative elements in areas as
diverse as environmental mediation, international conflict
management, and corporate team-building efforts.
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