Jared R. Curhan is the Ford International Career Development Professor and Associate Professor of Organization Studies at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, where he specializes in the psychology of negotiation and conflict resolution. He received his BA in Psychology from Harvard University and his MA and PhD in Psychology from Stanford University. A recipient of
promotion
The following items are tagged promotion.
Gender matters
Adapted from “Gender Assertiveness and Implicit Sexism,” first published in the Negotiation newsletter.
Most gender research in negotiation has examined differences between women and men, such as the tendency of women to be more anxious about the process and to set lower aspirations than men. The question of how people react to female negotiators versus
Learning from the Soda Wars
This past November, in an unusual move, Costco, the largest wholesale club in the United States, removed Coca-Cola products from its shelves and posted messages telling shoppers that Coke products would not be available until the company lowered its prices.
Managing, Organizing & Motivating for Value
Managing, Organizing & Motivating for Value (1816)
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
WINTER 2013
Instructors:
Ian Larkin
617-495-6884
Brian Hall
617-495-5062
Andrew Wasynczuk
617-495-8043
This course is about how to become a better value creator. Managers and negotiators create value by influencing (e.g. persuasion skills) and motivating (e.g. incentive systems) the behavior and decisions of others. This course provides a powerful framework (and set of practical
Is Your Role Not Quite Right? Negotiate a Better “Fit”
What happened the last time you faced a new leadership opportunity? Whether you were called on to head a team, a task force, a unit, a division, or a company, chances are you negotiated the compensation and perquisites of the appointment—your salary, title, vacation, and bonus. But did you look beyond these basics and negotiate for what you would need to succeed in the new role? New leaders often fail to address issues critical to their ability to perform on the job, including their fit with the role, Judith Williams, Carol Frohlinger, and I learned from interviews with more than 100 women who had taken on leadership positions.
Robert Bordone Appointed Clinical Professor of Law at Harvard Law School
Robert Bordone, founding Director of the HLS Negotiation and Mediation Clinical Program and the Thaddeus R. Beal Assistant Clinical Professor of Law, was promoted Thursday to full Clinical Professor of Law by unanimous vote of the HLS faculty, Acting Dean Howell Jackson has announced.
Bordone will be teaching two workshops at the Harvard Negotiation Institute this
Employee Grievances and Litigation
In 2000, Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE), seeing the surge in employee grievances and litigation in other companies, implemented a revolutionary dispute system they called SOLUTIONS to deal with its own internal disputes.
Dispute Systems Design, or DSD, is the process of identifying, creating, implementing, and evaluating an effective means of resolving conflicts within an organization.
CCE’s program consists
Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization
Discover how to build a winning team, find an effective negotiation “coach,” budget for negotiations training and boost your business negotiation results in this free special report from Harvard Law School.
Ambassador Luis Gallegos on Negotiating United Nations Human Rights Treaties
International Legal Studies, East Asian Legal Studies, the Human Rights Program, and the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School present a discussion with Ambassador Luis Gallegos
Ambassador Gallegos was appointed Ecuador’s Ambassador to the United States on October 1, 2005. Prior to this position, he was Ecuador’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations. He is
Employment ADR in the International Setting: Does Our Experience Have Any Transferability?
Presenter:
Arnold M. Zack
The United States has the reputation for effective use of mediation and arbitration of disputes in unionized workplaces. Anyone who has ever been inconvenienced abroad by frequent strikes of transit or government workers must wonder why other countries don’t adopt a system like ours, free of wildcat strikes. Arnold Zack, whose background and









