Principled Negotiation
(Redirected from Interest-Based Negotiation)
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A Principled Negotiation is a negotiation that emphasizes legitimate interest fulfillment (through objective criteria and ethical conduct).
- AKA: Interest-Based Negotiation, Ethical Negotiation.
- Context:
- Core Characteristics:
- It can (typically) prioritize Legitimate Interest through interest identification.
- It can (typically) apply Objective Criteria for decision making.
- It can (typically) maintain Ethical Standards during negotiation processes.
- ...
- Process Elements:
- It can (often) separate Person from negotiation problem.
- It can (often) focus on Interest rather than position.
- It can (often) generate Options for mutual gain.
- It can (often) establish Independent Standards for outcome evaluation.
- ...
- Range Variations:
- It can range from being a Basic Principled Negotiation to being an Advanced Principled Negotiation, depending on its complexity level.
- It can range from being a Formal Principled Process to being an Informal Principled Process, depending on its structure level.
- It can range from being a Simple Interest Resolution to being a Complex Interest Resolution, depending on its interest scope.
- ...
- Success Factors:
- It can have Trust Building for relationship development.
- It can have Transparency Mechanisms for information sharing.
- It can have Fairness Standards for process governance.
- It can have Problem-Solving Approaches for solution development.
- ...
- Outcome Focus:
- It can generate Sustainable Agreements through mutual benefit.
- It can create Long-term Relationships through ethical practice.
- It can establish Common Grounds through interest alignment.
- ...
- Examples:
- Business Contexts, such as:
- Public Sectors, such as:
- International Contexts, such as:
- Trade Agreements based on international standards.
- Diplomatic Resolutions through mutual respect.
- Cross-Border Collaborations with cultural considerations.
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Positional Bargaining, which focuses on fixed positions rather than underlying interests.
- Power-Based Negotiation, which relies on coercion rather than legitimate criteria.
- Zero-Sum Negotiation, which ignores mutual benefit opportunities.
- Deceptive Negotiation, which violates ethical principles.
- See: Negotiation Theory, Interest-Based Bargaining, Ethical Decision Making, Problem Solving Process, Collaborative Negotiation, Mutual Gain Approach.