Sam Edwards, J.D., LL.M.
Associate Professor Environmental Law and PolicyGreen Mountain College
1 Brennan CirclePoultney, VT 05764
edwardss@greenmtn.eduSam has been teaching negotiation at the graduate and undergraduate levels since 2002. From 2002-2007 he taught at Nagoya University's Graduate School of Law in Nagoya Japan. In 2007 he moved to Green Mountain College in Vermont where he teaches negotiation and a variety of law courses.
Mariana Islands, and Yap State in the Federated States of Micronesia.
Sam Edwards, Doing international business online for the small and medium business: will e-payments and online dispute resolution open doors to international trade, in CYBERLAW FOR GLOBAL E-BUSINESS: FINANCE, PAYMENTS, AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION Chapter 16 (Takashi Kubota ed., 2008).
Eileen Barker
Eileen Barker is a mediator and teacher based in San Rafael, CA. Over the past twenty years, Eileen has mediated hundreds of cases in a wide range of subject matters including business, partnership, employment/workplace, probate and estates, and family law/divorce. She has taught mediation and conflict resolution courses at UC Berkeley School of Law, UC Hastings College of Law, Sonoma State University and John F. Kennedy University, and currently teaches at the Werner Institute, Creighton University. Eileen is a leader in the movement to integrate emotional healing and forgiveness with conflict resolution. She leads trainings on transforming conflict through forgiveness, and is the author of the Forgiveness Workbook and Forgiveness Meditation CD.
Michael Cote
Environmental Urban Planner
3 Hampton Ave #47
Northampton, Mass., 01060
Phone: (206) 550-3034
Email: michaelcote@gmail.com
Web: http://umass.academia.edu/MichaelCote
Michael Cote is an environmental planner specializing in Climate Change Adaptation for coastal communities. He is working on a book and several articles covering the intersection of land-use law and climate adaptation policy. Adapting to climate change involves complex land-use laws, private property rights, and intense negotiations. He attended the negotiations at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15) in Copenhagen this past December with the Vermont Law School delegation. A corporate-contract writer in a former life, Mr. Cote recently graduated with a Masters in Regional Planning from UMass-Amherst, and a Masters in Environmental Law and Policy from Vermont Law.
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The use of technology throughout the dispute resolution process itself requires those involved to choose their means of communication carefully. Depending on the forum chosen, parties have to choose their words and phrases with caution, especially during instances where communication is solely text based, but also during telephone or recorded voice message communications and live video. During text- based ODR, it can be difficult to create trust between the parties, and there is the risk that something typed will be misinterpreted. These issues are present, and perhaps more compounded, in an apology setting, where it is possible that one party may doubt the sincerity of the other side’s apology, or there is the potential for an apology to come across crass or incomplete. A pre-recorded voice message would also run the risk of sounding insincere and rehearsed. Like a written apology, a recorded voice message may be received poorly, and cause the receiving party to feel as though his or her issues were not completely resolved. A live video apology may work best, as it would enable both parties to see each other’s body language and facial expressions. It would also allow for more of a dialogue during the apology. A live video apology has the feeling of a real face to face meeting, and helps create a more satisfying apology for the receiving party, as there is not the appearance that the apologizing party is hiding behind closed doors.Given the scenario what online platforms offer the best system to help facilitate an apology? Would text only offer a "safe" way to get the apology across? Would a pre-recorded voice message be better? Would live video work best?
Very good discussions. Apologies are often at the center of disputes yet "apology" is not a clear term. Does it mean different things in different cultures? Does is mean different things to the receiver and giver?
A canned text response might work in one context but be detrimental in another. Adapting the apology to the context of the mediation and matching it with the online medium presents the challenge to the mediator.
Another area we have yet to address is forgiveness. Researchers agree that there are many benefits (health, spiritual, etc) to giving forgiveness. Given the importance to the giver should mediation focus on forgiveness in the process? How would this work online? Would the communication of the forgiveness work best with a live video? Are there cases when more distance such as through a text message would benefit the mediation?
Forgiveness in mediation is a very sensitive topic. Unlike apology, forgiveness is not primarily a "transactional" affair between 2 or more people, but rather something that each person does or does not do for his/her own individual benefit. As you rightly point out, the benefits of forgiveness are profound
However, where it can apply in mediation is as a response to an apology, a way of saying "apology accepted, I release my anger and resentment, I forgive you . . . " LIke an apology this has to be absolutely authentic to have any real value. And, like an apology, if it is sincere, it can probably be effectively communicated in all of the same ways.
I'm curiour as to whether others of you have had experiences where this sort of exchange occurred between the parties? Either live or online?
One way of looking at apology (in my own book of course) is to differentiate between demanded apologies (whether "I want her to pay me X and apologize for what she did" or "What do I want? Fo him to take responsibility, apologize, and then we might be able to work this out!") and voluntarily-initiated apologies.
When a party demands an apology (whether in an online or face-to-face setting) I always try to find an opportunity to ask exactly what they mean by that. What do they want to hear? What do they want to see the other 'giving'? wWat emotion do they want to lay to rest, and what emotion would they like to see the other emoting in order to do that?
The same questions (in different formats) arise in cases where a voluntarily-initiated apology was made - but rejected by the other side. Was it rejected so as not to lose claims to monetary or other compensation? So as not to let the other off the hook before something more tangible is offered? Or - due to something being 'off' in the apology from the receiver's point of view: tone, wording, authenticity, timing, etc.
So, in addition to looking at the questions posed in the forum by Sam and others from the apologizer's side (e.g., what media can get my intent over as clearly as possible) we might look at this from the receiver's side (e.g., what do you need to receive in terms of apology) - and connect, that too, to the question of medium. "I want it to be very clear that she assumes full responsibility and undertakes never to do that again" might be conveyed adequately by several media, and most accurately perhaps by some of those; "I want him to look me in the eye and to hear him say he is is very, very sorry" might give us cues to utilize other types of media.
Hi Noam! Hope you are well:)
While I agree with your assessment of demanded vs. voluntary apologies I am unclear as to the prerequisites of getting to that point. If someone wants to voluntarily apologize yet they don't meet the expectations of the receiver what then? What if this has been an ongoing mediation over a divorce involving adultery and the adulterer finally wishes to confess and move the process forward and in their best manner (known to them) they offer the apology which is rejected (maybe because of the emotions it has invoked or recognition by the receiver they are no longer loved by the apologizer), what then?
To me, it then not only becomes an issue of demanded vs. voluntary apology but also demanded vs. voluntary forgiveness which is very different from an apology. In other words, we now have a conflict within a conflict (I think I've learned about this in some NDR class I took awhile back;)) not only is there the dispute that is the center of everyone's attention, but now there is a dispute over the way an apology was given/received. So, it wouldn't matter whether the apology was verbal, oral, online or through any other sort of medium discussed here - if there's not a reconciliation component then it's moot.
That's my two cents - I have studying to do and really shouldn't be squandering my time on ADRhub;)
Kim
Noam Ebner said:One way of looking at apology (in my own book of course) is to differentiate between demanded apologies (whether "I want her to pay me X and apologize for what she did" or "What do I want? Fo him to take responsibility, apologize, and then we might be able to work this out!") and voluntarily-initiated apologies.
When a party demands an apology (whether in an online or face-to-face setting) I always try to find an opportunity to ask exactly what they mean by that. What do they want to hear? What do they want to see the other 'giving'? wWat emotion do they want to lay to rest, and what emotion would they like to see the other emoting in order to do that?
The same questions (in different formats) arise in cases where a voluntarily-initiated apology was made - but rejected by the other side. Was it rejected so as not to lose claims to monetary or other compensation? So as not to let the other off the hook before something more tangible is offered? Or - due to something being 'off' in the apology from the receiver's point of view: tone, wording, authenticity, timing, etc.
So, in addition to looking at the questions posed in the forum by Sam and others from the apologizer's side (e.g., what media can get my intent over as clearly as possible) we might look at this from the receiver's side (e.g., what do you need to receive in terms of apology) - and connect, that too, to the question of medium. "I want it to be very clear that she assumes full responsibility and undertakes never to do that again" might be conveyed adequately by several media, and most accurately perhaps by some of those; "I want him to look me in the eye and to hear him say he is is very, very sorry" might give us cues to utilize other types of media.
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