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Assessing the Spectrum of Primate Behaviors To Produce a Path for Business Conflict Resolution
Author(s) -
Creo Robert A.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
alternatives to the high cost of litigation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1549-4381
pISSN - 1549-4373
DOI - 10.1002/alt.21596
Subject(s) - mediation , checklist , conflict resolution , point (geometry) , broad spectrum , path (computing) , resource (disambiguation) , psychology , computer science , process (computing) , column (typography) , sociology , political science , law , cognitive psychology , telecommunications , mathematics , computer network , chemistry , geometry , combinatorial chemistry , programming language , frame (networking) , operating system
Editor's note: Longtime Alternatives columnist Bob Creo, a veteran Pittsburgh neutral, is revisiting his classic CPR Institute website columns of a decade ago in a Back to Basics Series that he has subtitled “Human Problems, Human Solutions.” These updated and expanded columns, in print for the first time, began late last year. He has revisited and re‐examined mediation‐room techniques and practice issues. Last month, he focused on the science behind the behaviors common to primates, and how humans can learn about addressing conflict from their ape, chimp, and monkey cousins. In this column, he turns to placing these behaviors against mediation process points, and translates them into a 10‐point checklist for ADR success. He also provides a comprehensive resource list .