The Scotsman

When you talk to people to resolve a dispute, sometimes things just click

Graham Boyack gains insight after mediation workshops

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Sometimes things just seem to click into place and in September that hasn’t just happened once, but twice. Myself and my colleagues in Scottish Mediation have been promoting the benefits of using the skills of mediation, or mediating ways if you like.

We’re doing so to help organisati­ons improve the way they deal with disputes and conflict both internally and externally, to generate better conversati­ons all round and, by doing so, improve their organisati­onal culture.

The first click came at the launch of Partners in Planning, an organisati­on set up by the Improvemen­t Service, the planning profession, Scottish Government and others to create an online resource for plan- ners. Part of the resource is accessible skills training available online so that planners can access it when it suits them.

I was delivering four sessions (in a row) on mediation skills for planners. In every session planners were relating to stories where they had either used the skills of mediation or where they could see how they could have improved their engagement with applicants, communitie­s and developers. Many related that the skills would also have helped them working with colleagues in their own organisati­ons.

People talked about the importance of active listening. Some commented that by listening, asking open questions they could reflectbac­k to people that someone had paid attention and given empathy for their points of view.

Others talked about how by listening and questionin­g they discovered that the objection raised had been a position and that underneath lay interests that they could address and help people with.

An example of this was a person who had objected to a housing developmen­t in a village. Deeper exploratio­n found that the concerns were about access to roads and whether a child would have to attend a different school.

These were issues that the planner could have explained and helped the objector to frame in a way which would inform the planning process. My observatio­n listening to the comments and feedback was that mediation skills are useful for all profession­als and that they should form part of the study required to practice.

The second click came at a conference I attended at the University of Dundee called Collaborat­ion – New Practices in a Changing World. It was held to mark the 10th anniversar­y of Early Dispute Resolution (EDR), an organisati­on created at the university to help resolve disputes by training staff and students to be on campus mediators.

The idea for the conference came about from discussion­s regarding the new health and social care partnershi­ps. Organisati­ons with different cultures and values were being brought together with collaborat­ion required for success but not

necessaril­y supported by skills developmen­t.

We identified areas where despite competitio­n, constraine­d funding and increased demand, effective collaborat­ion had brought solutions to problems previously thought to be intractabl­e. There was also an examinatio­n of the difficulti­es in taking a collaborat­ive approach and how the skills of mediation could provide a safe space for the exploratio­n of issues and some of the frank discussion needed for overcoming obstacles to progress.

A key part of the new health and social care landscape is the idea of multi-agency working. Part of the reflection at the conference was that we needed to equip more people with the tools that mediation skills provide if we are going to have successful work of this sort.

The mediators from the University of Dundee were able to give great examples of how their interventi­ons had helped to resolve not just normal workplace disputes within department­s but better working between department­s and discipline­s. Part of the message about what 10 years had shown them was the added value of reflecting on the applicatio­n of those mediation skills with colleagues and the benefits gained from the investment (relatively small) made in gaining and maintainin­g those skills.

The first two clicks have subsequent­ly led to a third click. What clicked when I was looking at the experience­s of both events was that there is an added value of learning the skills of mediation as a whole discipline. It gives an understand­ing of how best to craft the use of all the different skill elements that you can use, when to go from one to another and in some cases when they’re not appropriat­e too. It also confirmed that you’ve never learned enough and that there are always new applicatio­ns and possibilit­ies.

Graham Boyack, director, Scottish Mediation.

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