Conflict Management and Political Behavior Across Our Globe
by Ralph Kilmann July 2012 |
To get this controversial subject going, let me suggest that the current political maneuvering in the U.S. (as the November presidential election approaches) is dramatically locked on the distributive dimension...perhaps being more concerned with winning election and political control (at all costs) rather than serving the constituency and the needs of the citizens. Perhaps BI-partisan behavior at the extreme is a battle fixed on the competing mode (high assertiveness, low cooperativeness), which often does NOT result in even a workable compromise that serves many people's needs. In sharp contrast, what our societies really seem to need is a good dose of TRANS-partisan behavior along the integrative dimension (moving from compromising to collaborating), so that the very people being "served" by the system can get their most important needs met.
But collaborating only works under a very specific set of conditions, including TRUST, good speaking and listening skills, a willingness to share what is really wanted and needed, seeing the bigger picture of whose needs we are serving, focusing on satisfying BOTH party's needs to the max, and a surrounding culture and reward system that encourages both parties to develop a solution that satisfies citizen needs...the proclaimed needs those parties are presumably serving.
Seeing the conditions that must be in place in order to shift from a distributive (bipartisan) perspective to an integrative (trans-partisan) perspective seems to highlight what must be addressed if our political systems (which evolved from hundreds of years of serving a different world under different conditions) will be able to truly serve citizen needs amidst TODAY's economic, social, religious, military, health, and environmental mega-conflicts.
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