Title: CHARTERED INSTITUTE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT OF NIGERIA
1Alternative Dispute Resolution(ADR)/Workplace
Mediation Practice By Adewale Jones HRMP
SHRM-SCP FCIPM FCIArb(UK)
2What is Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)?
It is the settlement of disputes/conflicts by
means other than resort to the courts which
involves settling disputes by litigation.
3The Goal of ADR
- It seeks to preserve/enhance personal and
relationships that might be otherwise damaged by
the adversarial process of litigation. - It is aimed at producing outcomes that are
creative and satisfactory to the parties in
dispute. - It is geared towards a settlement that ensures a
lasting solution to the issues in dispute than
will be obtained from the court process. - It is aimed at encouraging parties to adopt a
problem solving approach including an openness to
compromise and co-operate in order to arrive at a
win-win outcome.
4Why ADR and Not Law Suits ?
- They are very expensive.
- They take a lot of time (including the appeal
process). - They create bad blood.
- They bring with them some non-economic costs
e.g. stress, anger, distraction. - They result in lost productivity.
- They engender Low morale between the parties.
5The Nature and Benefits of ADR
- It is hinged on communication because conflicts
are usually created socially and can be better
managed by communication. - It is less formal thus allowing a spirit of
camaraderie in the resolution process. - It is expeditious and cost saving compared with
litigation where the cost especially by way of
legal and related fees can be enormous. - It reduces the delays usually encountered in
litigation. - It offers the opportunity to use processes that
are flexible. - It gives the parties more powers to control the
process of resolving the issues between them. - It rests on the intercession of an effective and
impartial third party who assists in overcoming
the stumbling blocks to settlement. - It assists in healing or providing the condition
for healing the underlying conflicts between the
parties.
6Various Types of ADR Procedure in General
- Negotiation (with some formality)
- Adjudication(Used mainly in Construction
Disputes) - Mediation
- Conciliation
- Arbitration
7Negotiation
- Negotiation is the process whereby two or more
parties work through their dispute usually with a
view to coming into some agreement or settlement
of same. - Types of Negotiation
- Adversarial Negotiation
- -A method of dispute resolution where the parties
negotiate from some stated or set positions with
the aim to gain concessions from their opponent
before they are disposed to a compromise
solution. - Principled Negotiation
- It is more practical than adversarial
negotiation. - The aim is to discover and utilise the interest
of the parties in arriving at a solution to the
dispute between them. - It is contrary to the adversarial method which is
based on one party taking a position and forcing
the other to make some concessions.
8Adjudication
- In the ADR world, adjudication is widespread
mainly in the construction industry particularly
in the developed world. - In adjudication, the adjudicator makes decisions
that are binding summarily with respect to
construction related contractual disputes. - In arriving at such decisions, the adjudicator is
not required to follow litigation or arbitration
procedures. - It is somewhat similar to arbitration in that the
decisions are binding, but the procedure to be
adopted and the summary nature of the decision
reflect the difference between the two.
9Conciliation
- Parties may seek to settle their dispute by
conciliation. - Conciliation is usually applied in Labour
Disputes. - To do this, a written request to conciliate is
sent by one party to the other. - Such request must contain a brief statement which
sets out the subject of the dispute. - The conciliation proceedings commence on the date
of acceptance of the request by the other party. - Once request is accepted, the parties shall refer
the dispute to a conciliation body which consists
of one or three conciliators. - For one conciliator, appointment is jointly by
the parties and for three conciliators
appointment of one is made by each party and the
last one is made jointly. - The conciliation body begins by understanding the
details of the dispute, request for other
information.
10Arbitration
- What is Arbitration?
- It is a procedure for the settlement of disputes
under which the disputing parties agree to be
bound by the decision of the arbitrator whose
decision is final and binding on the parties
legally. - The Nature of Arbitration
- It is based on agreement of parties.
- The choice of arbitrator(s) is by the agreement
of the parties. - It is private.
- It is a flexible and simple procedure such that
it can be adopted to suit the particular dispute. - It is cost saving i.e. it makes for quicker
decisions - Parties are free to choose the venue and the law
of the agreement. - The decision of the arbitrator is final.
11Arbitration-2
- The Nature of Arbitration (Continued)
- The State provides the law to govern the arbitral
proceedings - The court enforces and reviews an arbitration
award and process where there is disagreement. - Parties to a dispute may be represented if they
choose by persons of their choice who need not be
lawyers - Use of Experts- Experts can be appointed as
arbitrators or invited to clarify issues at the
arbitral hearing because of their unique
technical or professional knowledge. - Types of Arbitration
- Domestic Arbitration
- International Arbitration
- Adhoc Arbitration
- Institutional Arbitration
12Main Components of Arbitration
- Arbitration Agreement and Binding Nature.
- Appointment of Arbitrator and Appointment
Procedure. - Jurisdiction.
- Preliminary Meeting and Purpose.
- Arbitral Hearing/Documents Only Arbitration.
- Arbitral Awards.
- Challenge of Arbitral Awards.
- Recognition and Enforcement of Awards.
13Defining Mediation
- Mediation is a way of resolving disputes between
two or more parties. In mediation, a third party,
the mediator, assists the parties to negotiate a
settlement. - Better still, mediation is a process in which a
disinterested third party (a neutral) assists the
parties in workplace dispute in reaching a
voluntary settlement of their differences/disagree
ment. - Put another way, it is a process in which the
parties to a workplace dispute, with the
assistance of a third party identifies the issues
in dispute, develop options, considers
alternatives and endeavour to reach an agreement. - Summary- It is about the parties talking and
listening to each other and resolving their
dispute.
14History of Mediation
- Mediation generally is recorded to have developed
in very ancient times precisely in Ancient
Greece. - Members of those ancient communities frequently
brought disputes before local leaders or wise men
to resolve their local conflicts. - The practice turned out to be very successful
and before long it became applicable to all
facets of human relationships e.g. marital
issues, family issues , relationships at work
etc.
15Overview of Mediation
- It is an informal process that uses neutral,
third-party intervention. - It assists disputing parties in mutually
resolving their dispute/ disagreement through
peaceful means. - The Mediator does not decide what is fair,
wrong or right neither does he find people
guilty or innocent like a judge in the court. - The Mediator does not listen to the parties and
draw up the terms of settlement. He cannot force
it. Settlement is arrived at mutually by the
parties. - He advises and seeks concessions and shift in the
position of parties.
16Characteristics of Mediation
- It -
- Involves the use of a less formal means to
settle workplace disagreements. - Involves greater flexibility with respect to
procedure. - It involves the finding of a common ground
acceptable to the parties in dispute. - Promotes confidentiality and openness for honest
discussion. - Provides swifter response.
- Allows for early resolution of disputes before
parties become entrenched in their positions
17The Nature of Mediation
- The neutral third party has no authority to make
any decision because he has no determinative role
in with respect to the content of the dispute or
the outcome of its resolution. - The mediator uses skills to assist parties to
negotiate settlement terms and arrive at their
own resolution. - The Parties own the process the decisions
therefrom. - It provides an opportunity for better results.
- It usually makes for quicker resolution of the
dispute. - It makes for decreased stress, reduced
disruptions and distractions in the workplace. - It is less formal, flexible, speedy, voluntary,
confidential ownership by parties, morally
binding etc.
18The Features of Mediation
- Privacy Confidentiality- i.e. the
non-disclosure of anything said or done in a
mediation to a non-party/participant. - Voluntariness- i.e. Parties to a mediation are to
be involved in the process willingly and not by
compulsion. - Empowerment-i.e. the parties to the process are
sufficiently capable and able to reach their own
decision such that there is no imposition of
views. This strand makes for easy acceptability
of decisions reached. - Neutrality/Impartiality -i.e. the mediator is a
neutral person with responsibility for the mere
facilitation of the mediation process. - Uniqueness of Solution i.e. the resolution is
not subject to legal precedents or any other
norms thus making way for some level of
creativity and informality i.e. It engenders
creative solutions to the problem(s) at the
centre of the dispute.
19The Features of Mediation-2
- Ownership
- Mediation is predicated on the belief that
people have the capacity to resolve their own
conflicts, whether a complaint, an argument, a
relationship difficulty or some other dispute or
disagreement even if it may be difficult to do. - The view is that indeed that no-one else can do
this because it is ones conflict, He or she
owns it. - No-blame Approach
- Mediation is not an investigation which
involves searching for the truth in which one
person is found to be right and the other
wrong. An investigation fits within an
adversarial, competitive approach to conflict
which seeks to apportion blame or fault and to
establish one side as a victim or as wronged
within the situation while the other is deemed
the perpetrator or wrong doer.
20What is Workplace Mediation?
- Workplace Mediation is a confidential, informal
and voluntary process whereby an impartial
mediator facilitates communication between
parties in dispute to assist them in developing
mutually acceptable agreements to solve their
dispute and thus improve their working
relationship. - It is aimed at creating a win-win outcome.
21Nature of Workplace Mediation
- It is less formal.
- It is flexible.
- It can be speedy.
- It is voluntary,
- It is confidential
- the ownership of the process is by the parties.
- It is morally binding. etc
22Circumstances For the Use of Workplace Mediation
- - Relationship breakdown.
- - Bullying and harassment.
- Discriminatory conduct.
- Managers moral circumstance so as not to be
accused of bias. - Managers lack of sufficient conflict resolution
skills. - Grievance related matters.
- Disciplinary matters involving employee poor
performance etc.
23Benefits of Workplace Mediation
- It is Private/confidential.
- The Parties control the mediation.
- The process is flexible.
- The solutions are usually creative and unique.
- The cost is usually minimal.
- It provides an opportunity for employees to talk
in detail about their experiences and express how
they feel. - It allows a fast response to dealing with the
conflict thus ensuring that the parties do not
become entrenched in it. - It allows parties to fully understand the
perspective of others. - It allows parties to identify a way forward.
- It gives parties a sense of ownership over the
outcome.
24Benefits of Mediation-CIPD Survey Research 2011
- - Improvement of relationship- Cited by 80 of
Respondents. - Stress reduction/elimination-64.
- Cost of litigation 52.
- Retention of valuable employees-63.
- Reduction of non-formal grievances- 57
- Development of culture on people management-55
- Reduction of sickness and absenteeism-33
25The Flip Side of Workplace Mediation
- The neutral i.e. the mediator cannot impose the
settlement. - The neutral i.e. the mediator cannot compel the
participation of the parties. - The benefits of following a particular process to
make for due process or procedure is lost. - Sometimes a stronger party can influence the
outcome. - It is non-binding and unenforceable .
26Types of Mediation
- Facilitative Mediation
- (a) It is the most widely used form of
mediation. - (b) It is interest based, concerns
problem-solving and it is a rational-analytic
form of mediation. - (c )The mediators primary focus is to the
mediation process i.e. to assist parties to
communicate with each other so that they can
engage in discussions to effectively resolve
their dispute - (2) Evaluative Mediation
- (a) It is advisory and normative mediation.
- (b) The mediator focuses on the substance
and merits of the dispute thus, providing
assistance to the parties by assessing the merits
of the dispute and moving the parties to a
compromise. - (c) The mediator is more focused on the
rights of the parties and makes a determination
on the merits of the case and uses his or her
influence to move the parties from their
positions.
27Types of Mediation
- (3) Transformative Mediation.
- (a) It is also called therapeutic
reconciliation mediation. - (b) It is built upon the belief that
mediation should focus on the parties
relationship. - (c) It seeks to empower the parties to
resolve their differences, not just the dispute
that brought them to mediation. - (d) This approach focuses on both the
empowerment of the parties, and the recognition
by each of the parties of the other parties
needs, interests, values, and points of view. - (e) Based on the principles of empowerment
and recognition, transformative mediators meet
with the parties together since this fosters
personal growth, acknowledgement, and empathy
toward the other party. - (f) It believes that mediation has the
potential to transform any or all - of the parties relationships during
mediation, so its focus is broader than simply
resolving the current dispute.
28What is Conflict?
- Conflict is generally conceived of as relational
disputes between two or more parties. - The Oxford Dictionary sees it as the clashing
of opposed principles - More elaborately, conflict is the existence of a
clash of interests, ideas, beliefs, values,
actions or directions. - It is an inherent part of any relationship and
it is usually a fall-out of a dispute.
29What is Workplace Conflict?
- Workplace conflict is a disagreement or
opposition between /among individuals (workers
and/or managers) teams ,departments in an
organization. - It may manifest as employment conflict,
labour-management conflict or conflict between
two or more employees.
30 The Nature of Workplace Conflict
- Workplace conflict is naturally the product of
incompatible or opposing needs, wishes, beliefs
and values etc of individuals. - Conflicts in the workplace are products of
dispute. Such disputes if unresolved or addressed
can grow worse, become conflict and may be
costly. - Conflict in the workplace is normal, although
stressful. When managed and controlled, such is
beneficial because it can stimulate change and
increase productivity. - Conflict may be positive but it could also be
negative and dysfunctional. - When positive, it can stimulate change which in
turn will bring a lot of benefits that will stand
the organization and the employees in good stead.
- When dysfunctional it creates problems some of
which may not be easily amenable to resolution or
reconciliation.
31How Does Workplace Conflict Differ from Workplace
Dispute
- Workplace conflict has to do with an ongoing
situation, unlike a dispute, which is a one-off
incident. - For example If a dispute goes unresolved, it can
cause a conflict situation. This state of
affairs, if left unresolved, can escalate quickly
and create a potentially danger.
32The Dispute-Conflict Chain
33Some Kinds of Disputes
- Constitutional e.g. disputes regarding
citizenship, human/fundamental rights, etc - International as between States(Countries)
- Organizational- i.e. intra or inter-organizational
disputes. - Employment/Workplace Related-unfair labour
practices, wrongful termination or dismissal etc. - Corporate- as in between a company and its
share-holders, between shareholders and receivers
etc. - Commercial- i.e disputes bothering on contractual
relationship and breaches of terms of contract
etc. - Consumer- as in disputes between the manufacturer
of a product and the consumer or supplier-
consumer dispute. - Family this may be related to inheritance etc.
34How Does Workplace Conflict Occur?
- Workplace conflict happens for example-
- (a) when personalities clash.
- (b) when team members perceive interference
from one another . - (c)when employees feel unable to progress due to
anothers actions.
35How Conflict Manifests
- Stage I- A dispute between one or more
employees, without resolution, may result in an
uncomfortable working environment. - Such may be characterised by gossip and rumour,
an awkward atmosphere and non-cooperation between
those involved. - Stage 2- The atmosphere in stage 1 if unattended
to can lead to further dispute in the form of
arguments and complaints. - Stage 3- If the matter remains unresolved
hitherto uninvolved parties may become involved
and take sides. Incidents escalate and tension
rises. Parties become increasingly unproductive
as all their energy is directed towards the
matter. - Stage 4- It becomes obvious that the dispute has
evolved into conflict. Without management
intervention the conflict can become crisis
resulting in clashes, emotional outbursts,
resignations, verbal abuse, even threats of
physical violence. - The key questions are (a) how was the situation
allowed to get out of hand? (b) how do we
prevent a crisis situation from happening in the
first place?
36Steps to Take at the Dispute Stage
- Step 1 Bring the disagreeing parties together
- Step 2 Lay down ground rules for the
intervention. - Step 3 Identify the problem/issues.
- Step 4 Understand both parties position
- Step 5 Move forward by finding a solution to
prevent a reoccurrence of the dispute? - Step 6 Review the situation later with both
parties.
37The Sources and Types of Workplace Conflicts
- Relationship/ Interpersonal Conflict This is a
conflict that may arise when one person behaves
in a negative manner or may be as a result of one
persons perception of another based on e.g.
stereotypes and rumours etc. In this case,
relationship is affected negatively, performance
affected due to lack of team cohesion. - Value Conflict This arises when people or groups
have different views regarding for e.g. moral
values bothering on what is right or wrong. - Interest Conflict - This occurs when desired
wish or interest of one person is in conflict
with that of another person or group. Usually,
this happens when one person is of the view
that the desires or interest of the other if
allowed will affect his or her own interests from
being achieved. An example is when two people
who have a not too smooth relationship with each
other are required by their manager to work as a
part of a team.
38The Sources and Types of Workplace Conflicts-2
- Organizational Conflicts- They stem from various
factors within the organization and sometimes are
induced by factors outside the organization, - Examples are- (a) Labour/management and
supervisor/employee tensions usually triggered by
power differences. - (b) Differences in supervisory styles
- (c) Conflicts bothering on (i) pay equity, (ii)
resource allocation, (iii) the distribution of
duties, (iv) workload and benefits, (v) fairness
in treatment between employees or groups of
employees. - - (d) Good Practices of other organizations
particularly similar ones can be a source of
conflict those practices are being demanded by
employees. - Conflicts Induced by Trends/Change -Modern
workplaces have significant levels of stress -
and conflict that are related to
change-management and technological change. Such
result in changing work methodologies constant
reorganization etc
39The Sources and Types of Workplace Conflicts-3
- Conflicts induced by Poor Communication-i.e.
where the management or superiors do not
communicate effectively, this can create
conflict. For example, a supervisor who gives
unclear instructions to employees can cause
confusion as to who is supposed to do what, which
can lead to conflict. - Conflicts Caused by Poor Performance e.g. a
situation where an employee is not "pulling his
weight, "this can lead to conflict, that can
escalate into a confrontational situation. - Conflicts Ignited by Harassment- This can take
many forms e.g. sexual or racial harassment
.Organizations that do not have strong
harassment policies in place are in effect
encouraging the behavior, which can result in
conflict. - Conflicts Caused by Limited Resources -
Organizations that are looking to cut costs may
scale back on resources such as office equipment,
access to official vehicles or the reduction in
spending limit etc.. Employees may feel they are
competing against each other for resources, which
can create friction in the workplace regularly.
40Myths about Workplace Conflict
- Myth 1 Conflict In the Workplace is Bad.
- We do know conflict is not inherently bad. It is
a normal thing in any gathering of people
especially because they have different
personality and they are coming from different
backgrounds. - Myth 2 Conflict is Win-Lose.
- Conflict is often mistakenly viewed as an
undesirable contest of wills, power and
determination where one person wins and the other
loses thus reducing its potential benefits. This
assertion is not true. - Myth 3 Only Bad Employees Cause Conflict.
- The so called bad or difficult employees may be
contributors to conflict, but there are also
workplace conflicts between the supposedly good,
productive and dedicated employees.
41Life will always have conflict. The idea is not
to live life without conflict. The idea is to
deal with conflict gracefully.
Zen Proverb
42The Mediation Process
- A typical mediation process consists of eight(8)
stages- - The initiation or commencement stage.
- The preparation stage.
- The introduction stage.
- The problem statement stage.
- The problem clarification stage.
- The generation and evaluation of alternatives.
stage - The selection of alternatives stage.
- The agreement stage.
- Note that there is always an overlap between
stages d, e, f, g and are repeated before a
consensus is reached by the parties an agreement
is finalised.
43Workplace Mediation
- Cost of Conflict
- Time consuming.
- Engenders absenteeism.
- Diverts management time.
- Can lead to turnover and replacement costs.
- Lower staff morale, commitment and productivity.
- Poor working relationship.
- Loss of focus.
- Creation of a blame culture.
- Damage to organizational reputation.
-
44Workplace Mediation-2
- Who Mediates?
- -Employee(s) trained and accredited as mediators
as internal mediators and/or - -Representative(s) of a firm of mediators.
- The Role of the Mediator
- The mediator is not a judge as to say one person
is right and the other is wrong or to issue
directives. - He is in charge of the process seeking to resolve
the problem and not to impose solutions or
determine the outcome. - He explores issues, feelings and concerns of all
participants. - Helps to open up opportunities for the resolution
of the dispute. - Helps to engender communication to resolve the
issues at stake.
45Workplace Mediation-3
- Mechanism used by the Mediator
- He uses the joint problem solving approach to-
- (a) Identify the various interests and real
issues in the disagreement. - (b) Identify options for the resolution and
settlement of the dispute. - Stages in the Workplace Mediation Process
- Stage 1-Mediator Holds separate meetings with the
parties to know their respective story. - Stage II- (a) Holds joint meeting to hear the
issues, summarise the areas of agreement and
disagreement and put forward the agenda for the
for the rest of the mediation. - (b) Joint meetings continue, the issues are
explored involving communication and the changing
of perceptions.
46Workplace Mediation-4
- Stages in the Workplace Mediation
Process(continued) - (c) The mediator continues to encourage and
support joint problem solving by the parties,
ensures the solution and agreements are workable
and record any agreement reached. - Stage III- Closing the Mediation
- Agreement having been reached, the mediator
brings the process to a close. - Provides a copy of the agreed statement to those
involved and explains their responsibilities for
its implementation - Note- (i) Sometimes no agreement is reached and
other procedure may be used to resolve the
conflict. - (ii) In the event of a future legal suit, what
happened during the mediation cannot be a subject
of discussion without the agreement of both
parties
47Workplace Mediation-5
- Putting in Place a Mediation Scheme
- (a) Option I -Develop in-house mediation scheme
with trained in-house mediators - (b) Option II Use the services of an external
mediation firm/mediator (s) on the basis of
call-on arrangement. - Note the two approaches are not mutually
exclusive and can be used along side each other. - Determinant of the Option to Choose.
- (a) Cost/investment required in setting up an
internal scheme viz-a-via the use of an outside
firm or expert. - (b) Size of the organization-a small
organization may find the cost of internal
arrangement high. - (c) Geographical spread of the organization
- Type and people practices and culture of the
organization.
48Workplace Mediation-8
- Guidance for use where arrangement is internal
e.g. booklet for managers and for staff which is
to state
89 Booklet for Managers Booklet for Staff
1. What is mediation? What is mediation?
2. Why chose mediation? Why chose mediation?
3. When is mediation appropriate? How do I decide if mediation is appropriate for my matter?
4. What is the line Manager s responsibility? What can I expect from the mediation process?
5. What commitment is required from the line Manager? What is about the mediation agreement?
6. What next after the agreement?
7. Frequently Asked Questions
49Workplace Mediation-9
- Selecting Mediators for the In-house Scheme.
- Voluntary/self nomination
- Managers/ Superiors nomination.
- Either option please set proper criteria re-
experience and/or knowledge in conflict/dispute
management. - An organization may also wish to train some of
its staff as mediators. - HR Practitioners as Mediators
- The general view is that HR practitioners as
superintendents of people are likely to be good
mediators because of their people skills. - The challenge in having them as mediators is
because of the possible direct conflict between
their role as mediators and as HR practitioners.
50Some Skills of a Good Mediator
- Active listening.
- Good reasoning.
- Observation
- Ability to summarise.
- Problem solving.
- Ability to reflect and rationalise.
- Rapport building.
- Facilitation.
- Reframing.
- Information analysis,
- Planning and time management.
- Inclination for procedure etc.
51Some Qualities of a Good Mediator
- Empathy.
- Impartiality/Fairness.
- Independence.
- Accessibility and approachability.
- Non-judgmental.
- Honesty.
- Creativity.
- Credibility and integrity.
- Flexibility etc.
52The Breakdown of Mediation
- This could be as result of -
- The withdrawal of one party.
- Tension in the mediation process.
- The behaviour of one of the parties.
- One party is too depressed to continue.
53The Final Point A mediation process may end with
or without an agreement even where there is no
breakdown of the process e.g. an improvement in
the relationship of the conflicting parties.
54Thank You For Your Attention