Book Summary of Intractable Conflicts and their Transformation by Louis Kriesberg, Terrell Northrup and Stuart Thorson, eds.
Citation:
Intractable Conflicts and their Transformations. Louis Kriesberg, Terrell Northrup and Stuart Thorson, eds. New York: Syracuse University Press, 1989, 249 pp.
This Book Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
Intractable Conflicts and their Transformations brings together essays from a number of
authors who explore intractability through diverse theoretical frameworks and
case histories.In all of these
essays, intractable conflicts are seen as resisting resolution,
but are not considered "unresolvable." These essays were first presented at a conference sponsored by Syracuse University's Program on the Analysis and Resolution of Conflicts.
Intractable Conflicts will be of interest to those
who seek to understand and avoid or resolve apparently
intractable conflicts. This work is divided into ten essays in
three parts, with a foreword by Elise Boulding. This book,
Boulding observes, offers an "antidote to the frustration and
despair that many in the peace studies field feel" in the
face increasingly intractable conflicts. These essays offer
cogent analyses of the sources of intractability, and offer
suggestions for preventing and transforming intractable
conflicts.
In the Introduction, Stuart Thorson lays out some of the
shared themes which run through the essays which follow. When we
analyze conflicts, Thorson observes, we label them as tractable
or intractable (resistant to resolution). These are not absolute
characteristics, however. Rather it is our perception or
framing of the conflict that makes it tractable or not. Thus, in
order to transform the conflict from intractable to tractable, we
need to reframe or redescribe it.
Thorson gave an example: during World War II the Germans
issued an order requiring Danish Jews to wear the Star of David.
If the Danish people had followed the order, they would have been
divided into Jews and Danes. This is the way that the Germans
wanted to frame the situation. However, King David announced that
there was no such differences dividing Danish people and all of
them would be wearing the Star. Thus he redescribed the situation
it in such a way that identification (and hence discrimination)
against Jews became impossible. In this case a one sided
reframing of the problem influenced the perceptions and led to
conflict transformation. After the King and his people started
wearing the Star, the Germans disavowed their order.
A mutual reframing of the problem can have an even greater
impact on the conflict's development. Grobachev's "new
thinking" can be understood as a suggestion for mutual
reframing of U.S.-Soviet relationships. The articles presented in
this book show how changing shared perspectives or defining the
problem in common terms can move conflicts toward their
resolution.
Part One of the book explores the sources of intractability.
Fred Frohock evaluates the potential for reason to resolve
conflicts. Practical reasoning can and does admit contrary
conclusions. Hence, intractable conflicts do not simply reflect a
lack of reasonableness in one party or another. Susan Hunter
explores the case of environmental conflict in the Lake Tahoe
Basin to provide a framework for analysis of intractable
environmental conflict. She argues that intractable conflict
between environmental and pro-development actors tend to stem
from "ontological" differences, that is, basic
differences in identity, values and perception. Taking another
tack, John Agnew explores the spatial and temporal sources of
ethnic conflicts, suggesting that intractability "is
generated by the dynamics of the conflict, rather than by the
reasoning processes of the parties to it."
The second part of the book describes the dynamics of
intractable conflict. Terrell Northrup addresses the role of
identity in the development, maintenance, and transformation of
intractable conflicts. Participants' identities form the basis
for their subjective interpretations of the external conditions
of conflict. Such subjective interpretations are crucially
important to an understanding of conflict. (A summary of this
chapter alone is included in this set of abstracts). Ruth Wynn
analyses the history of child custody disputes. Jeffrey Haydu
discusses the sources of and increasing intractability in labor
conflicts from 1897 to 1911, with emphasis on the perceived
legitimacy of collective bargaining.
Part Three focuses on the transformation of intractable
conflicts into more tractable forms. Louis Kriesberg discusses
conflicts in the Middle East and Central Europe. Drawing on these
cases, he argues that "tractability or intractability is not
an inherent characteristic of a conflict." He identifies
three critical issues in preventing a conflict from becoming
intractable, and suggests strategies for preventing
intractability. (A more detailed summary of this article is also
included in this set of abstracts.)
John Nagle examines the rise of the West German Greens as an
evolving response to intractable political conflicts, and
evaluates their potential for success. James Palmer and Richard
Smardon investigate the human-use values associated with
wetlands, particularly the wetlands near Juneau, Alaska. While
differing values and goals form the basis of such environmental
conflicts, accurate information about such values may identify
points around which constructive dialogue can occur. Richard
Schwartz examines Arab-Jewish dialogues in the United States. He
argues that "grass-roots reconciliatory dialogue can occur
across adversarial lines." While such dialogues do not
involve decision makers, they may contribute to successful
resolution of conflict by promoting understanding and fostering
creative ideas.
Louis Kriesberg concludes this book by discussing the research
and policy implications of its essays. The cases in the book, he
observes, can be characterized according to the nature of the of
the adversaries, the social systems within which they contend,
and the issues they struggle about. Transformation of the
conflicts depends on those characteristics. For instance,
Kriesberg observes, "social conflicts involving one or more
adversaries who are not clearly bounded or highly differentiated
are likely to follow different patterns of intractability
transformation than are conflicts among clearly bounded and
highly differentiated adversaries" (p. 121). The transition
toward tractability would be faster if adversaries are bound by
the decisions of their leaders. For example, the shift toward
tractability was easier to achieve between the governments
of Israel and Egypt than between Israeli Jews and Arab
Palestinians.
Further, Louis Kriesberg identifies areas for future research
in transformation of intractable conflicts. Those areas include:
how to achieve a settlement without ontological changes in the
parties' views; how conflicting interests are transformed toward
recognition of common aspects; how other conflicts prevail over
the original one and shift the parties' views about the primary
enemy and even unite them to fight with a new enemy; what is the
role of the intermediary in facilitating de-escalation; how
formal and informal intermediaries compare. There is a debate
about the nature of intractable conflict transformation. One
opinion is that transformation should be gradual. This allows the
parties time to reassess each other and develop trust that will
lead to the conflict becoming tractable. Another view is that
when the conflict has reached the stage of intractability, a
dramatic shift in its nature is needed to transform the
relationships. Meeting basic human needs can encourage
transformation. There is a need to examine examples of conflict
transformation toward tractability.
Kriesberg suggests policy decisions that can prevent conflict
from becoming intractable. These include: efforts by policy
makers to prevent some parties from developing deep interests in
continuing the conflict, or from threatening the identity of the
opponent; or they can develop institutional ways of managing
conflicts.
In order to stimulate transformation, policies can be pursued
which encourage gradual development of support for accommodation
with the opponent; identifying some issues that can be settled
and working to resolve them; redefining the past and present
relationships between adversaries to achieve reconciliation and
accommodation. There are also several short-term strategies that
can de-escalate the conflicts, such as finding parties that would
agree on a partial settlement; finding issues on which agreement
can be reached; using intermediaries to transform the destructive
patterns of relationships by, for example, adding compensatory
benefits. "What seems obvious and necessary about a conflict
can be recognized as a social convention that could be different
under changed circumstances" Kriesberg observes. (p. 220)
This suggests that even the most intractable conflicts can be
transformed if the circumstances that causes them--and
contributes to their perseverence can be changed.
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