Article Summary of "Cooperation and Conflict" by Morton Deutsch
Citation: Morton Deutsch. "Cooperation and Competition." Morton Deutsch and Peter T. Coleman, eds., The Handbook of Conflict Resolution: Theory and Practice San Francisco: Jossey-Bas Publishers, 2000, pp. 21-40.
This Article Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
Most conflicts involve a mix of cooperative and competitive motives, and
so Deutsch develops a theory of cooperation and competition in order to better
understand conflict processes and resolutions.
A key element in understanding cooperation/competition is the type of goal
interdependence found between the involved parties. Parties goals' may be
negatively interdependent--one party's success correlating with the other's
failure. Such situations tend to yield competitive relationships with a win-lose
orientation. Parties' goals may be positively interdependent--success
correlating with success, or failure with failure. These situations tend to
yield cooperative relationships where the parties have a win-win orientation.
Cooperative relationships display a number of positive characteristics,
including more effective communication and coordination, open and friendly
attitudes, a sense of mutuality and a willingness to increase the other's power.
Competitive processes tend to yield the inverse, negative effects: obstructed
communication, inability to coordinate activities, suspicion and a lack of
self-confidence, desire to reduce the other's power and to dominate them.
Deutsch's research "suggests that constructive processes of conflict
resolution are similar to cooperative processes of problem solving, and
destructive processes of conflict resolution are similar to competitive
processes."(p. 27) A key question then is how to foster cooperative
relationships. In response Deutsch offers his eponymous Crude Law of Social
Relations: "The characteristic processes and effects elicited by a given type of
social relationship also tend to elicit that type of social relationship."(p.
29) Friendly, empowering gestures tend to evoke cooperative responses.
Suspicious, domineering attitudes tend to provoke competitive responses.
Deutsch identifies some of the implications that this theory of cooperation
and competition has for our understanding of conflict, for our practice of
conflict management, and for training in conflict resolution. A cooperative
orientation on the part of the parties will facilitate constructive resolution
of a conflict. Social support is key to creating and maintaining such a
cooperative orientation. Constructive resolution is also more likely when the
parties can reframe their understanding of their goals and conflict, coming to
see their respective goals as positively interdependent and the conflict as a
joint problem. This initial reframing, and so constructive resolutions, will be
facilitated by the parties' adherence to the norms of cooperation. These norms
include honesty, respect, responsiveness, acknowledging responsibility and
extending forgiveness, emphasizing the positive and seeking common ground.
Constructive conflict resolution rests on the very basic values of reciprocity,
human equality, human fallibility, shared community, and nonviolence. These
values are widely shared, and can provide common ground between otherwise
starkly opposed parties.
In addition to these attitudes and values, effective conflict management
requires skills and knowledge. First are the skills required to establish and
maintain effective working relationships between the various parties and third
parties to a conflict. Second are the skills needed to sustain a cooperative
conflict resolution process over the course of the conflict. Third are the
skills for developing effective group problem-solving and decision-making
processes.
These theoretical insights also have implications for practitioner training.
The teaching methods and the learning context itself should embody the
cooperative, constructive problem-solving orientation. Practitioners will also
need access to a supportive environment, if they are to maintain their own
cooperative attitudes in the face of unfavorable or even hostile conflict
situations. Finally, Deutsch emphasizes the need for practitioners to reflect
upon their own practice and their own frameworks for conflict resolution, so
that they may both learn from and contribute to the growing understanding of
conflict and its resolution.
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