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Roger
Fisher is Founder and Director Emeritus of the Harvard Negotiation Project
and the Williston Professor of Law Emeritus at Harvard Law
School, where he has taught since 1958. Prior to joining the
Law School faculty in 1958, he worked for the U.S. Government
in Paris, practiced law in Washington, D.C., and served as
an assistant to the Solicitor General in the Department of
Justice.
Professor
Fisher has taught and written extensively on international
law, international conflict, and for more than a decade has
devoted himself almost exclusively to the task of understanding
and improving the process by which people, organizations,
and governments deal with their differences. Professor Fisher
is a member of the steering committee of the Program on Negotiation,
a consortium of dispute resolution programs among Harvard,
M.I.T., and Tufts.
His
latest book, Beyond Reason: Using Emotions as You Negotiate,
was co-authored by Daniel Shapiro. In 1998, he co-authored
Getting It Done: How to Lead When You're Not in Charge,
with Alan Sharp with John Richardson. He also is co-author
with Andrea Kupfer Schneider, Elizabeth Borgwardt, and Brian
Ganson of Coping with International Conflict: A Systematic
Approach to Influence in International Negotiation, published
by Prentice Hall in 1997. Beyond Machiavelli: Tools for
Coping with Conflict, with co-authors Elizabeth Kopelman
and Andrea Kupfer Schneider, was published by Harvard University
Press in the Spring of 1994. The second edition of Getting
to YES: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In, with
co-authors William Ury and Bruce Patton, was published by
Penguin Books in 1991. Getting Ready to Negotiate: The
Getting to YES Workbook, with co-author Danny Ertel, was
published by Penguin Books in June 1995. He is co-author with
Scott Brown of Getting Together: Building Relationships
As We Negotiate, published by Penguin Books in 1988. In
addition, a video workshop for senior executives and corporate
training entitled Getting to Yes: The Video Workshop
was produced in 1991. His earlier books include: Improving
Compliance with International Law; Points of Choice:
International Crises and the Role of Law; International
Mediation: A Working Guide -- Ideas for the Practitioner;
Dear Israelis, Dear Arabs: A Working Approach to Peace;
and International Conflict for Beginners.
Professor
Fisher has 30 years' experience dealing with international
conflict as an advisor and strategist. He advised both the
Iranian and United States governments in negotiations for
the release of the American hostages in 1981. He helped design
the process for the successful Camp David negotiations between
President Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Begin of Israel.
He met with and advised the presidents of three of the five
Central American countries in advance of the 1987 Esquipulas
II treaty on a regional peace plan; he was present in Guatemala
City during the negotiations at the request of President Cerezo
of Guatemala.
As
an individual, through the consulting firms of Conflict Management
Inc. and Vantage Partners, and with the non-profit Conflict
Management Group, Professor Fisher has taught and advised
corporate executives, labor leaders, attorneys, diplomats,
and military and government officials on settlement and negotiation
strategy. In recent years he has conducted negotiation seminars
in Bonn, Moscow, Stockholm, Paris, London, Milan, San Salvador,
Bogota, Mexico City, and the Republic of South Africa.
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