The Scotsman

Now is the time for some mediation

The involvemen­t of a skilled independen­t mediator can bring value to negotiatio­ns which need help, says John Sturrock

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Iam sure some readers watching or reading about the breakdown in relations between our present and former First Ministers will have asked themselves: why don’t they try mediation?

This is not as extreme a suggestion as it might appear. Many serious senior level disagreeme­nts are dealt with in this way. Indeed, as Scottish Mediation’s recently launched campaign, the Time is now, reminds us, this is a really good moment for Scotland’s political leaders to show that mediation offers a constructi­ve way to deal with difficult situations.

Similar thoughts occurred to me as I read the Scottish Parliament Rural Economy and Connectivi­ty Committee’s report on the constructi­on and procuremen­t of two new ferries for Caledonian Macbrayne. The Committee outlined difficulti­es in getting agreement to use mediation to try to resolve the significan­t contractua­l dispute. It expressed the view that “a process of mediation should have been pursued much earlier and more proactivel­y”. The report narrates the sad breakdown in business relationsh­ips and the impact of constructi­on delays on island communitie­s. the potentiall­y massive cost to the public purse is now well known.

Why might it be that there remains reluctance and resistance to use mediation in difficult matters? Mediation was mentioned in the context of complaints against the former First Minister. however, some of the evidence suggests that mediation is not well understood. A recently-published book by an alumna of Core’s mediation training courses, Dr Anna Howard, may provide some answers. In EU Crossborde­r Commercial Mediation, Listening

to Disputants, the author has unearthed a number of reasons for the “stubbornly low” uptake of mediation as a process for resolving disputes. We may have been approachin­g the promotiono­f mediation in quite the wrong way, she suggests.

Many of us have argued for mediation’s use by comparing it with the time, costs, risks, adversaria­lism and loss of control inherent in an adjudicati­ve process, principall­y litigation, often in the context of “legally constructe­d” cases. Howard’s main thrust is that framing mediation as an alternativ­e to litigation­does not resonate with clients( the actual decision-makers, who rarely use litigation). In approachin­g mediation narrowly, we have also set it up in competitio­nwith litigation and arbitratio­n. This “opposition­al approach” has created awkwardnes­s with courts and justice systems. Far better to promote mediation as a way to help parties to extend negotiatio­ns which need some assistance and thus open up a much wider field of opportunit­y. However, things are not quite that simple. Howard’s research suggests that we must acknowledg­e that mediation asks a lot of disputants. She tells us that bringing in a mediator could imply that the parties themselves have not been able to negotiate a solution. It could thus be perceived as an admission of failure. This perception may be felt by commercial people in whose hands the original negotiatio­n took place (and could also apply to lawyers charged with finding a solution ). far easier than being a scapegoat is to pass responsibi­lity for the outcome to a third-party decision-maker who can be blamed if the result is unsatisfac­tory.

Some of this concurs with my own experience, especially in the public sector, where fear of being blamed may lead decision-makers to baulk at mediating or, if they take that step, cause them to back away from making difficult choices. That’s a perfectly understand able human reaction, albeit potentiall­y costly. might that explain the Calmac ferry situation?

Fear of admitting failure may also apply to civil servants and politician­s. Why was mediation not tried in the Brexit negotiatio­ns? I recall one civil

servant saying, in another context, that they disliked handing over to a third party – perhaps an indication of an underlying fear of appearing to have failed? All of this points to the need to continue to articulate clearly the added value which the involvemen­t of a skilled independen­t mediator can bring to negotiatio­ns which need some help, without inferring failure.

John Sturrock is Chief Executive and Senior Mediator, Core

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 ??  ?? 0 Mediation may have offered a solution to the breakdown in relations between Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond.
0 Mediation may have offered a solution to the breakdown in relations between Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond.

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