Michael Wheeler

Michael WheelerMichael Wheeler is the MBA Class of 1952 Professor of Management Practice at Harvard Business School where he teaches both Negotiation and The Moral Leader, as well as a variety of executive courses. In previous years he served as faculty chair of the first year MBA program and headed the required Negotiation course. He has taught Leadership, Values, and Decision Making and, as Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School, Mediation and Consensus Building. At Harvard Business School he has received the Greenhill Award for his contribution to the school’s mission.

Wheeler’s current research focuses on negotiation dynamics, dispute resolution, organizational design, and ethics. He is the editor of the Negotiation Journal and co-director of the Negotiation Pedagogy initiative at the inter-university Program on Negotiation.

Wheeler is the author of ten books, including the forthcoming, The Fog of Negotiation: Improvising Agreement in the Real World. He is the author or co-author of What’s Fair? Ethics for Negotiators (with Carrie Menkel-Meadow), Business Fundamentals in Negotiation, and On Teaching Negotiation. His text Environmental Dispute Resolution (with Lawrence Bacow) won the CPR-ADR’s annual award as the best book on negotiation. He has written numerous articles in both scholarly journals (among them, the Yale Journal of Regulation, the Harvard Negotiation Law Review, and The Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies) and the public press, including The Atlantic Monthly and The New York Times.

He has written scores of negotiation exercises, cases, notes, and self-assessment tools. These materials cover subjects ranging from nonverbal communication and complexity theory, to the parallels between negotiation strategy and both jazz and war-fighting. He has written extensive case studies of negotiation system design, documenting GE’s “early dispute resolution initiative” and Guinness’s process for approving acquisitions and joint ventures. With colleagues Gerald Zaltman and Kimberlyn Leary, he is investigating emotions and unconscious attitudes that people bring to the bargaining table. With Clark Freshman he is also exploring nonverbal communication and lie detection in negotiation.

Wheeler taught at MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning from 1981 to 1993, where he was Director of Research at MIT’s Center for Real Estate Development. Previously he was Director of Education and Research at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Professor of Law at New England Law School. He has also been a Visiting Professor at the University of Colorado and the Politecnico di Torino, Italy. He has appeared extensively on public television in Boston and elsewhere.

He holds degrees from Amherst College, Boston University, and Harvard Law School, and was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1969. He has been a panelist for the American Arbitration Association, and has served as a mediator or arbitrator in a variety of business and regulatory disputes. He has advised corporate clients, trade organizations, and government agencies on negotiation issues in the United States and abroad.

Courses Taught:

Program on Negotiation for Senior Executives – PON Executive Education Seminar

Research Interests: complexity, conflict management, dispute resolution, negotiation, psychodynamics, improvisation

Select Publications:

Wheeler, Michael A. “Poise Under Pressure.” Negotiation 9, no. 12 (December 2006): 1-3.

Wheeler, Michael A., and Nancy J. Waters. “Origins of a Classic: Getting to Yes Turns 25.” Negotiation Journal 22, no. 3 (October 2006): 475-481.

Wheeler, Michael A., and Lakshmi Balachandra. “What Negotiators Can Learn from Improv Comedy.” Negotiation 9, no. 8 (August 2006): 1-3.

Wheeler, Michael A. “Closing the Deal.” Negotiation 9, no. 4 (April 2006): 2-5.

Wheeler, Michael A. “Is Teaching Negotiation Too Easy, Too Hard, or Both?” Negotiation Journal 22, no. 2 (April 2006): 187-197.

Link to website:

http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&facEmId=mwheeler%40hbs.edu

3 Responses to “Michael Wheeler”

  1. Dr. Navzer D. Sachinvala /

    Hi Professor Wheeler: I interacted with you in seminars taught by professors Debra Klob and Lawrence Susskinid, at PON between 1998-2004. Then I was Research Chemist with the USDA-ARS. My teachers, colleagues, and students in basic medical sciences always read and discussed reports and books by PON members. Through them we learned to be better human beings, and derived vicarious pleasure from beautifully crafted agreements as reported via PON publications. However, following multiple sclerosis, immobility, and an exceptionally arduous convalescence, I gained control of my hands to use 4-6 of 10 fingers and stand and walk with crutches. My colleagues (former students) Drs. Angeline Stergiou (psychiatrist; OH); Professors Guy Uechi (U.Pitt); and Morton Litt (Case Western, OH, my macromolecular science post-doctoral adviser) and I want to submit a manuscript entitled: Negotiating with Self - Choosing to Replace Fear with Reason in Difficult Situations & Making the Heuristic Habit. I am doing this because my teacher from Iran Professor Esmail Meisami (U.Ill, Urbana-Campaign) died Jan 21, 2013, and Essie got me interested in concepts of psychology, physiology, as they relate to human the immune-system. I also read about the Death of Richard Holebrook in the news papers. Could I please ask you to guide me through the publication in your Journal? Much stress can be interrupted by breathing and physiological adjustment as it occurs. I will keep the technical jargon out, and keep the language as if I am writing for a news paper. The article is dedicated to the memory of Professor Esmail Meisami, my physiology and neurology teacher in Iran 1977-1979. In addition, I will take full responsibility for publication and other costs as they occur. Please advise. I thank you in advance for your efforts. Best wishes, Nozar Navzer D. Sachinvala, Ph.D., MBA Retired, USDA-ARS, New Orleans, Home: 2261 Brighton Place, Harcey, LA 70058 Tel: 504-368-6318 E-mail: Sachinvala@aol.com Reply

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