Unlike mediators, co-resolvers can serve as a:
- Coach, bringing the assigned party to negotiate at their best.
- Advocate, personally assisting the party in the negotiation (this is negotiation advocacy, NOT legal advocacy).
- Problem-solver, contributing ideas for possible solutions to the conflict.
By taking sides in the negotiation, the co-resolvers are able to become more involved in the negotiation. While mediators maintain a detached level of impartiality, co-resolvers are able to contribute negotiation-advice, helpful arguments, and solutions during the interaction.
Coaching.
Mediators enhance the negotiation experience of disputants by encouraging respectful behavior, checking to see that their assertions are clear and understandable, delineating speaking time, and organizing topics of discussion. However, most mediators report that they do not coach individual parties, most likely because they must be impartial and cannot appear to be boosting one side or the other. Co-resolvers, on the other hand, are balanced rather than impartial and can coach their parties in negotiation skills.
This kind of coaching, occurring mostly in caucus or in quiet asides, would consist of procedural advice and personal motivation.
Advice from co-resolvers would focus on methods in negotiation--the strategies and skills involved in asserting your interests, selling them to the other side, hearing the other side's interests, and reaching a solution that both find agreeable. Many parties to negotiation are not comfortable with this form of confrontation, exchange, and decision-making and would therefore value the personal assistance. And because the relationship-based co-resolution structure controls their behavior, the co-resolvers will only coach their parties to use cooperative, productive methods in the interaction.
Also through their coaching function, co-resolvers are able to provide motivation throughout the negotiation. While mediators are only able to encourage resolution and conciliation, co-resolvers can push the parties to do their best in the negotiation, to fully express themselves, and to keep the negotiation alive. This personal support should bring the disputants to make fuller use of the negotiation-based interaction and to work through difficult issues where other approaches may declare impasse.
Advocacy.
Beyond enhancing each party's participation, co-resolvers are also able to directly impact the negotiation by adding their own input. This is "advocacy" in that it supports and advances one side through argument or assertion, but it is not legal advocacy.
Only available to attorneys, legal advocacy involves arguing favorable interpretation and application of the law. The type of advocacy that occurs in co-resolution, however, is focused on and contained in the negotiation. Each co-resolver can help their party's standing in the negotiation through assertions and arguments concerning positions, interests, and solutions (not necessarily anything related to the interpretation and application of the law).
Besides being different from legal advocacy in focus, co-resolution advocacy is also different in character. Instead of attacking the other side's case or promoting their side's interpretation through debate, the co-resolver will attempt to win over the other side by bringing them to connect with or have a more favorable view of their side's interests.
Though the co-resolvers should largely play a secondary role, supporting the parties as they negotiate a resolution, they are able to interject in situations where it would be helpful. For example, they may supplement their party's assertion with how it benefits the other side, diffuse an attack from the other side by adding perspective promoting their own side, and actively sell resolution to the other side. Again, the co-resolvers are able to function as partisan advocates while maintaining a dispute resolution focus and philosophy because their actions cannot offend or endanger their continuing relationship.
Mediators, on the other hand, cannot issue arguments that favor either side because it would call their impartiality into question and may cause one party to leave the table. Furthermore, even if mediators could become more involved, subconscious human bias may bring them to guide the negotiation in favor of one side (whereas co-resolvers are continually balanced by their relationship). Though mediators can advocate for resolution in general terms, their impartiality prevents them from inserting perspectives that are not internally balanced.
Problem-Solving.
Mediators can suggest solutions to problems, however, this practice is often discouraged, and co-resolvers may be better adept for this function. The problem with mediators suggesting solutions is that their ideas may offend one side and their subconscious bias may bring them to push a lopsided resolution. Co-resolvers, on the other hand, will each suggest solutions that more openly focus on their side's interests, but then through their balanced, cooperative relationship, they can amend each other's ideas to more reliably meld both side's aspirations.
Therefore, when the parties are stumped, the co-resolvers will be more comfortable with contributing ideas, bouncing them off the other side, and attempting to bring the parties into this exchange.
In conclusion, because co-resolution uses partisan negotiators to facilitate a resolution, the process is able to enhance the parties' experience with one-sided support. By splitting the mediation function--each acting as a mediator across the table only--and adding personal assistance to their own side, the co-resolvers are therefore able to do everything that mediators can do but can also venture beyond impartiality to roles such as coach, advocate, and problem-solver.
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