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Conflict. “Conflict is an expressed struggle between at least two interdependent parties who perceive incompatible goals , scarce rewards , and interference from the other party in achieving their goals.”. Integration (acknowledgment/ respect) Respect/Choice De-escalation Focusing
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“Conflict is an expressed struggle between at least two interdependent parties who perceive incompatible goals, scarce rewards, and interference from the other party in achieving their goals.”
Integration (acknowledgment/ respect) Respect/Choice De-escalation Focusing Positive results Polarization Coercion Escalation Drifting (kitchen-sinking) Negative results Conflicts can be Functional or Dysfunctional
Individual Conflict Styles (Wilmot & Hocker, 1998)
High aggression/ energy Competition Collaboration Compromise Concern for Self Low aggression/ energy Avoidance Accommodation Low cooperation High cooperation Concern for Other
Avoidance • Advantages • Allows time to think • Useful if issue is trivial • Helps you not to get too involved in the conflict • Keeps others from influencing you as much • Disadvantages • May demonstrate that you don’t care • Gives impression that you’re not flexible • Lets conflicts simmer/heat up rather than working through them • Denies mutual influence • Techniques • Denials of conflict, evasive remarks, changing the subject, abstract remarks, noncommittal statements/questions, friendly joking
Competition • Advantages • Useful when you need to make a quick, decisive action • Can encourage creativity • Useful when the goal is more important than the relationship • Demonstrates how important the issue is to you • Disadvantages • Can harm the relationship • May encourage others to be passive-aggressive, or use other covert means • Limits conflicts to win-lose • Taken to an extreme, can be physically harmful • Techniques • Denial of responsibility, personal criticism, rejection, hostile imperatives, hostile jokes, hostile questions, presumptive remarks, threats, violence
Compromising • Advantages • Can accomplish important goals in relatively short time • Reinforces power balance in relationship • Can be used as a back-up method when other styles fail • Appears reasonable to most parties • Disadvantages • Can become an easy way out, when other solutions might work better • May be seen as lose-lose • May be a sophisticated form of avoidance • Techniques • Appealing to fairness, suggesting a trade-off, maximizing wins/minimizing losses, offering a quick short-term solution
Accommodating • Advantages • Useful when you find out you’ve been wrong • You can give a little and gain a lot if the issue’s not important to you • Allows harmony of relationship, without overt conflict • Disadvantages • May reduce finding creative options • Can be harmful to the relationship if one person always gives in, and the other always gets their way • If the accommodation is resented, conflict will likely just arise again later • Techniques • Giving up/giving in, disengagement, denial of needs, expression of desire for harmony
Collaboration • Advantages • Generates new ideas • Shows respect for the other party • Gains commitment to the solution from both parties • Affirms importance of relationship • Builds team approach to conflict management • Demonstrates that conflict can be productive • Disadvantages • May not be worth the time and energy involved • Can be manipulative, or used as a one-up move • Techniques • Descriptive statements, disclosing statements, qualifying statements, solicitation of disclosure, solicitation of criticism, supportive remarks, concessions, acceptance of responsibility
Relational Conflict Styles“Patterns of managing disagreements that repeat themselves over time.” • Complementary Conflict Style • Partners use different but mutually reinforcing behaviors • Symmetrical Conflict Style • Partners use the same tactics • Parallel Conflict Style • Shifts between complementary and symmetrical styles depending on the issue • Can also look at styles based on level of intimacy and aggressiveness (also Conflict-Avoidant, Validating, and Volatile) • Conflict rituals
Conflict Management (Wilmot & Hocker, 1998)
Clarify Communication • Speak your mind and heart • Listen well • Express strong feelings appropriately • Remain rational as long as possible • Summarize and ask questions • Give and take • Avoid all harmful statements • Check Perceptions • Ask directly what is going on • Tell others your own reality • Look for flexible “shades-of-gray” solutions
Transforming Conflicts (Wilmot & Hocker, 1998)
What are your options for trying to change a conflict? • Try to change the other person • Try to alter the conflict conditions • Change your own communication and/or perceptions
Midrange conflicts tend to be most productive… Potential for Productiveness Unexpressed Conflict Regulated Conflict Unrestrained Conflict
Our difficulties with conflict can often be boiled down to problems with: • Avoidance (Unexpressed Conflict) & • Escalation (Unrestrained Conflict)
Avoidance • 2 types: • Avoidance -> Avoidance -> Avoidance etc. • Avoidance-> Escalation -> Avoidance etc. • Why do we tend to avoid? • You feel the other person wouldn’t like it or is so fragile they’d fall apart if you brought up the issue • You feel you don’t have the right to bring up the issue • You feel you lack the skills to deal with the conflict
Breaking the Avoidance Cycle • Remember that the other person needs your help to correct whatever misperceptions have formed • Remember that not sharing important information doesn’t do either of you any good • Try to reframe your concerns about bringing up the issue, or come up with counterarguments for them. • If you find yourself complaining to others behind the person’s back, recognize it as indirect anger, and a clue you need to engage that person. Ask yourself, “What is it that I need to tell him/her?”
You are too cold. You’re smothering me. I need more warmth. I need you to look at me when you talk. I would like it if you’d answer my questions. I would like to have some more time to do my own thing. I need some time to myself. Moving from Complaints to Requests
Escalation • Anger is a secondary emotion, resulting from: • Fear • Hurt • Frustration of unmet needs/thwarted desires • People tend to deal with anger through: • Suppression • Ventilation/Catharsis
Tips for Expressing Anger: • Verbally state the anger. (“I am angry.”) • Distinguish between venting and acknowledging anger. • Agree that you won’t attack each other in a state of anger. • Work to find the stimulus of the anger. You can use the X-Y-Z formula
Receiving Anger Well • Acknowledge the person’s feelings. • Clarify the specific behaviors involved. • Gauge the intensity and importance of the issue. • Invite the person to join you in working towards solutions. • Make an optimistic relational statement.
Some general guidelines for transforming your conflicts… • Express caring/concern for the other person and their feelings • Don’t bargain over positions • Separate the people from the problem • Focus on interests, not positions • Invent options for mutual gain (What can each of you offer?) • Insist on using objective criteria