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Procedural justiceand a constructive approach to negotiating with stakeholders
Jill Howieson
Procedural justice effect = the fairness of the procedure can enhance stakeholders satisfaction, and perceptions of overall fairness, regardless of the outcome of the decision.
The primary factors that contribute to judgements about procedural justice:
opportunities for participation (voice) consideration of the stakeholders’s views the neutrality of the forum the trustworthiness of the person enacting
the process the degree to which the procedure is
dignified, polite and respectful.
Quality of decision-making
• gains enough information from the stakeholder to handle the issues well
• neutrality – bases the advice on knowledge and not on personal biases
• correctablity – build in flexibility to correct decisions if not meeting needs
• conduct simple and efficient meetings
• understands the issues
Quality of treatment
• respect, politeness and dignity
• trustworthiness
• ‘voice’
• stakeholder’s needs and stakeholders’s views taken into account
• allowed to ‘vent’ if needed
• informational justice
Positional Negotiation
It involves negotiating over positions and focuses on finding a solution that maximises your own gain—usually to the detriment of the other stakeholders.
Positions
Positions represent what stakeholders want or say
they want: their goals, claims and demands .
Opportunities in using Positional Negotiation
• less time-consuming
• less preparation required
• may offer acceptable short to medium term solutions
• useful in one-off situations (no relationship)
• risk averse and protects own interests
• simple and efficient
• good in situations of difficult communications, high conflict or distrust
Risks in using Positional Negotiation
• inhibits flexibility
• relationships not central
• only satisfies substantive goals if you win
• focused on individual gain
• ‘claims value’/fixed pie
• short-term, one-off transactions that involve compromise
• unbalanced and unfulfilling agreements
Interest-based negotiation begins with an exploration of the problem. Stakeholders educate each other about their interests and then jointly problem solve on how to meet those interests.
Interest-based Negotiation
Interests
The needs, concerns and fears that motivate the stakeholders.
• Substantive interests- satisfaction of content needs, e.g goods, services, money, legal rights
• Procedural interests- satisfaction with the way things are done, where, when etc
• Psychological/Relational interests- satisfaction of needs in relation to fairness, ongoing relationship, expression of emotion – the social dimension
• Principle interests- ethical, customary or cultural values
Proced
ural
Substantive
Relational
Satisfaction Triangle
PrinciplePrinciple
Alternatives
• Possible solutions or actions which do not requires agreement between the parties.
• The things we can do independently (without the other party).
Options
• All of the possible ideas for resolution which can be agreed to by the parties.
• The things we can do together (by agreement).
Legitimacy (independent criteria)
• The criteria by which the fairness of the option or agreement can be judged
• Independent or objective standards
• Precedent• Industry standards• Objective assessment• Guidelines/Protocols
• Something that helps to say “this option is fair not just because I say it is fair, but also because the [independent criteria] says it is”
Risks in using interest-based negotiation
– Needs commitment from all stakeholders
– Open to exploitation where there are power imbalances
– Time consuming and complex
– Difficult in situations of conflict and distrust
Opportunities in using interest-based negotiation
— creative and flexible solutions
— builds better relationships
— potentially satisfies all types of interests
— opportunity for mutual gain
— ‘creates value’/expands the pie
— establishes trust, respect and future cooperation
— parties create own solution
— fair, satisfying and sustainable agreements
— good quality solutions
— encourages creativity
— focuses energy and attention on productivity rather than fighting
A constructive approach