Negotiating a Template for Labor Standards

Negotiating a Template for Labor Standards: The U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement is a detailed factual case study that tracks the negotiation of the labor provisions in the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement signed into law on January 1, 2004. It draws upon a range of published and unpublished sources and interview with some of the primary players to give a true inside look into a challenging international negotiation. Written primarily from the point of view of the lead U.S. negotiator for the labor chapter, the case study discusses the two countries' interests and positions on the labor provisions, the possible templates available from prior agreements, the complex political maneuvering involved, and the course of the negotiations themselves – from the opening talks to the various obstacles to the final post-agreement celebration.

Teacher's Package includes:

  • 32-page case study
  • Teaching notes with summary of the case study and suggested discussion questions

Negotiating About Pandas for San Diego Zoo

SUMMARY:

The Negotiating About Pandas for San Diego Zoo case concerns the executive director of a zoo in the U.S. who seeks two giant pandas, an endangered species, from their only source on the planet: China. Compounding the difficulty, many other zoos are also trying to obtain giant pandas—the “rock stars” of the zoo world. Yet, as if relative bargaining power were not enough to preoccupy the zoo director, it is not his only major challenge.

His zoo’s initiative attracts attention from a wide range of stakeholders, from nongovernmental (NGO) conservation groups to government agencies on both sides of the Pacific Ocean. Several of these organizations ardently oppose the zoo’s efforts, while others change their positions over time. All of this attention influences the zoo’s negotiations. Therefore, a second challenging task for the zoo director is to monitor events in the negotiating environment and manage their effects on his negotiations with Chinese counterparts.

This three-part case is based on the actual negotiations and offers lessons for business, law and government students and professionals in multiple subject areas. They include negotiation, international business, international relations, nonprofit management, corporate social responsibility, and more.

NOTE: This case may also be used as a base case or as background for other panda negotiation cases and role-plays that are available through the author, Stephen Weiss.)

This case study includes the following:

  • Teaching notes, which include abstracts of the three parts of the case, information on the target audience, teaching/learning objectives, directions for student preparation before class, class schedule and equipment, discussion questions and suggested answers, notes from the author’s interviews with the case protagonist (the zoo director), the case aftermath, and supplementary readings.
  • Part A, which details the San Diego Zoo’s executive director’s initial plans for a long-term agreement regarding China’s pandas.
  • Part B, which deals with responding to Chinese demands regarding the pandas as well as the changing environment surrounding the negotiations.
  • Part C, which explores the agreements and their aftermaths.


CLASS TIME NEEDED:
150-165 minutes


ABSTRACTS OF THE THREE PARTS:

Part A. Douglas Myers, the executive director of San Diego Zoo, observed a huge jump in zoo visitors—and revenue—when giant pandas were loaned to the Zoo for 6 months in 1987. The pandas also highlighted the Zoo’s role in public education and animal conservation. In early 1988, Myers decided to try to bring pandas back for a much longer visit. This case provides information about San Diego Zoo, giant pandas, panda exchanges, and U.S.-China relations. The reader is asked to assist Myers by developing a framework for the long-term transaction, identifying agenda items for negotiation, and crafting a communication strategy that includes talking points.

Part B. In March 1992, Myers faced two excessive demands from his Chinese counterparts—the China Wildlife Conservation Association (CWCA)—and an unfavorable negotiating environment, especially in the U.S. In this part of the case, the reader must consider: a) how to respond to the CWCA, which includes reviewing just how far Myers should be willing to go to obtain pandas, and b) how to ensure that the environment does not scuttle his panda initiative. The case provides a map of major players, a chronology of U.S. government and NGO actions, and financials for the Zoo.

Part C. This last part, which covers 1992 to 1996, describes Myers and his team’s negotiations, the resulting agreement, and renegotiation with the CWCA, and their interactions with the U.S. Government—specifically, the Fish and Wildlife Service. Myers completed a memorandum of understanding with the CWCA in April 1993. Then it took 21 months to obtain U.S. government approval (a period that included re-negotiations with the CWCA), 17 more months to obtain Chinese government approval, and another 2½ months for two pandas to arrive at San Diego Zoo. The reader is not asked to make any decisions in Part C but rather to draw insights and articulate lessons about negotiation from it.


TARGET AUDIENCE
:

This case is written for readers outside the “zoo world” and especially, for graduate students and professionals in business, law, and international relations. For business readers, the tasks and decisions required in the case relate to subject matter in courses on negotiation, international business, not-for-profit management, corporate strategy, corporate social responsibility/business ethics, conflict management, environmental analysis (business environment), and government relations.


TEACHING OBJECTIVES:

The ultimate objective for readers of this case is to determine how Myers (and the Zoological Society of San Diego (ZSSD)) might best negotiate in order to reach a good outcome. There are many dimensions to this negotiation and thus many specific or subordinate teaching/learning objectives. The most useful way to think about and group them may be in terms of arenas: namely, at the negotiating “table” (direct, formal communication with the counterpart); and beyond the table (communications with other stakeholders, although informal communications with the counterpart could also be included). Myers’ main tasks in each arena are, respectively, how to communicate with his counterpart, and how to manage the effects of external events and conditions on the negotiations.

Fundamental negotiation concepts such as interests, alternatives to agreement, and bargaining power/leverage may be invoked to guide the discussion of tasks. At the same time, their use represents an opportunity for students to understand the concepts better and appreciate their analytical and practical value.

Finally with respect to broad objectives, this case calls not only for Myers and his ZSSD colleagues to think carefully about their interests, goals and limits, but also to consider and appreciate other parties’ worldviews and interests. These stakeholders include not-for-profit organizations, government ministries and agencies, international and national non-governmental organizations, and political leaders in China and in the U.S. Their concerns cover multiple perspectives: financial, commercial, legal, ethical (environmental/corporate social responsibility), political/diplomatic, cultural and more.

Specific examples of teaching/learning objectives for each part of the case are listed below. The list is illustrative rather than exhaustive and geared primarily toward negotiation instructors. Given the complexity of the case, instructors could easily develop additional objectives. At the same time, instructors who choose to pursue a number of objectives would be well-advised, for the sake of pedagogical effectiveness, to emphasize the main objectives. To that end, the objectives below are categorized as primary or secondary.

By working on this case, students (readers) can learn to:

Part A:

  • pay attention to the “big picture” and the creation of frameworks (formulas) that structure a transaction or relationship between parties;
  • establish a negotiation agenda (the items for discussion);
  • identify different sources of bargaining power (“leverage”) and alternatives to an agreement (BATNA – Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement);
  • develop a communication strategy (point of departure, talking points) by which to persuade a counterpart in a powerful bargaining position—particularly, in a Sino-American context;
  • appreciate the general openness of negotiation to innovation and different types of relationships between parties;
  • and, consider when (if, how) to incorporate cultural factors in plans for negotiation.
  • handle uncomfortable topics or tasks in creative, tactful ways that are sensitive to the parties’ relationship;
  • define what should go into a plan for negotiation (vs. what often doesn’t);
  • and, see the nature and impact of cultural factors “in context” (i.e., within a given situation) by comparing aspects of CWCA and other Chinese bargaining behavior in this case to stereotypes of Chinese negotiating style.
  • look for non-primary parties and stakeholders (including “blocking coalitions”) who can exert influence on focal negotiations;
  • consider how to coordinate multi-level, internal (“tiered,” principal-representative/ agent) negotiations, and internal and external (“linked”) negotiations;
  • broaden the notion of a negotiation outcome beyond the mere attainment (or not) of agreement so that it includes post-negotiation consequences (including implementation of the agreement);
  • acknowledge that a contract may not solve everything for all time (cf. “a deal’s a deal”), and identify the kinds of events/circumstances that make a reopening desirable;
  • and, cope, as negotiators, with unforeseen circumstances.

Part B:

  • respond effectively to extreme demands from a counterpart;
  • monitor external events and conditions that influence negotiators’ discussions;
  • recognize and deal with different forms or expressions of bargaining power;
  • handle uncomfortable topics or tasks in creative, tactful ways that are sensitive to the parties’ relationship;
  • define what should go into a plan for negotiation (vs. what often doesn’t);
  • and, see the nature and impact of cultural factors “in context” (i.e., within a given situation) by comparing aspects of CWCA and other Chinese bargaining behavior in this case to stereotypes of Chinese negotiating style.

Part C:

  • look for non-primary parties and stakeholders (including “blocking coalitions”) who can exert influence on focal negotiations;
  • consider how to coordinate multi-level, internal (“tiered,” principal-representative/ agent) negotiations, and internal and external (“linked”) negotiations;
  • broaden the notion of a negotiation outcome beyond the mere attainment (or not) of agreement so that it includes post-negotiation consequences (including implementation of the agreement);
  • acknowledge that a contract may not solve everything for all time (cf. “a deal’s a deal”), and identify the kinds of events/circumstances that make a reopening desirable;
  • and, cope, as negotiators, with unforeseen circumstances.


WHY SELECT THIS CASE?

  • It deals with one of the most troubling concerns that students and managers raise: How do you negotiate from a position of relative weakness?
  • Rich in complexity, the case places the reader directly in the shoes of the principal negotiator. Students “see” what he sees as he pursues his interests and faces challenge after challenge.
  • The setting is unfamiliar to most students and will compel them to examine it thoroughly. They will not short-cut or bias analysis by invoking personal knowledge or experience.
  • The San Diego negotiation had no precedent, yet it was successful and pioneering. It became a template for subsequent negotiations in the U.S.
  • This negotiation may serve as the basis for “matched comparisons” with other panda negotiations, which have been and will continue to be conducted in countries throughout the world.
  • Lessons from this case are transferable to other contexts. Conversely, it may be used itself to show the applicability and analytical power of common negotiation concepts.

Negotiation Pedagogy Conference 2019

On November 15th, 2019 the Teaching Negotiation Resource Center hosted an international conference on excellence and innovation in negotiation pedagogy, featuring faculty and trainers from diverse fields of practice. Check out these select highlights from the conference for a preview:

The full videos for each of the sessions highlighted above are available by ordering the video collection. This collection of videos includes the following sessions and speakers from the conference:

Welcome & Introduction
Lawrence Susskind, Ford Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning at MIT

Teaching Negotiation in International Relations: Building Winning Coalitions to Manage the Risks and Opportunities of Peace-Making
Brian Mandell, Mohammad Kamal Senior Lecturer in Negotiation and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School
Monica Giannone, Program Director at the Harvard Kennedy School Negotiation Project

Teaching Negotiation in Law
Toby Berkman, Senior Associate at the Consensus Building Institute
Rachel Viscomi, Assistant Clinical Professor of Law at Harvard Law School

Teaching Communities to Resolve Climate Change Disputes
Lawrence Susskind, Ford Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning at MIT

Teaching Negotiation Using Data Analytics
Niraj Kumar, Founder and CEO of iDecisionGames

Leveraging Video in Negotiation Teaching: The PON Global Model
Alain Lempereur, Alan B. Slifka Professor and Director of the Conflict Resolution and Coexistence Program at Brandeis University Heller School of Social Policy and Management

Interactive Instruction in Online Negotiation Training
Lawrence Susskind, Ford Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning at MIT

Closing Remarks
Michael Wheeler, Professor Emeritus of Management Practice Harvard Business School

 

Power Asymmetry and the Principal Agent Problem

This video simulation was designed to give students insights into the challenges surrounding difficult conversations, both with people across the table, as well as with people on their own side. The scenario also focuses on negotiating with those who are more senior and who may exhibit nonconstructive behavior. The video can be used in variety of courses covering management, leadership, negotiation, communication, and leading diverse organizations. The video is only 15 minutes long and includes a three-minute introduction by Professor Susskind.

The video is separated into three sections, highlighting separate phases of a difficult conversation or negotiation:

  1. preparation and goal alignment,
  2. re-evaluation of mid-course strategy, and
  3. review and coaching.

Check out this brief preview of the video:

The full 15 minute video comes with teaching notes and the full simulation dialogue. The exchange was designed to bring numerous concepts "to life” on the screen, provoke debate, facilitate small group discussion and spark individual reflection.

Key concepts embedded in the dialogue include:

  • Managing the tension between principals and agents (the “principal- agent problem”).
  • Handling Difficult Conversations
  • Coaching as a Managerial Responsibility
  • The “Dealmaking Mindset” vs. the “Implementation Mindset”
  • Dealing with Power Asymmetries
  • Influencing Without Authority
  • The “Fixed Mindset” vs. the “Growth Mindset”

PowerScreen Problem

SCENARIO:

HackerStar, Inc. is a small closely-held corporation that develops and markets software for microcomputers. The six-year-old company was founded by Hacker, a brilliant programmer who is responsible for the company's products and became its manager, and Star, a dentist and computer hobbyist who provided the capital. Hacker and Star are each 50% owners. The company has done moderately well, but now faces a crisis resulting from a dispute between the partners over the ownership and disposition of PowerScreen, a new product developed by Hacker, at least partly on his own time and definitely against Star's wishes. The company lawyer has referred Hacker and Star to separate counsel in order to avoid a conflict of interest. The exercise revolves around the meeting of these lawyers. At issue is the ownership of PowerScreen and the future of HackerStar, Inc.

 

MECHANICS:

This exercise is designed as a one-on-one negotiation between lawyers. Individual preparation takes at least two hours; there are moderately extensive financials of potential relevance. Individual preparation can be followed by about an hour of group preparation among the negotiators who will represent each side (in separate negotiations). For the negotiation, allow 45-60 minutes, and 30-60 minutes for review. After having participants negotiate this case, it is often useful to show them (perhaps after a break) The HackerStar Negotiation. In the videotaped negotiation, the principals conducted their own negotiation, with their lawyers assisting. The tape shows an example of fairly good principled negotiation, but still raises questions about goals, tactics, and the outcome.

 

MAJOR LESSONS:

  • This negotiation present the opportunity to use a careful analysis of the interests of the parties to craft a recommended agreement to solve a realistic business dispute between partners in a high-tech business.
  • The issues divide more or less neatly between the dispute over PowerScreen, and the question of how to improve the management structure of the company in general (assuming the dispute is resolved). The former seems more of a distributive problem, the latter a joint problem to be solved. The question arises as to which should be addressed first.
  • The negotiation over PowerScreen can be centered nicely around objective criteria or, alternatively, addressed in a more positional manner.
  • How to reestablish a good working relationship between the disputants is a key question vital to the long-run success of this negotiation.
  • Representatives of Hacker and Star in this negotiation clearly have limited authority. It is important to explore the question of exactly what the product of the lawyers' meeting should be.
  • Participants may opt to recommend arbitration or some other form of third party intervention in the event that they, or their clients, cannot resolve the PowerScreen problem. The question of BATNA should be clearly addressed in advance.
  • If a preparation by side session has been used, preparation and group process issues can usefully be raised when debriefing participants.

 

TEACHING MATERIALS:

For all parties:

  • General Instructions

 

Role Specific:

Confidential Instructions for:

  • Stanley Star's Attorney
  • Allen Hacker's Attorney

 

Teacher's Package (43 pages total)

  • All of the above
  • Teacher's note

 

PROCESS THEMES:

Apologies; Agenda control; Attorney/ Client relations; Authority; BATNA; Commitment; Communication; Constituents; Cost-benefit analysis; Creativity; Credibility; Currently perceived choice analysis; Decision analysis; Drafting; Emotions, role of; Fairness; Financial analysis; Information exchange; Interest analysis; Lawyering; Legitimacy; Meaning of "success"; Mediation; Misrepresentation; Objective criteria; Options, generating; Personality; Reality testing; Relationship; Risk aversion; Separating the people from the problem; Systems of negotiation; Threats; Trust; Yesable propositions.

 

ENHANCED VERSION AVAILABLE:

A digitally enhanced version of this simulation is available through the iDecisionGames platform and includes the following features:

  • An Instructor’s Guide summarizing the negotiation concepts covered in the simulation, a quick review of simulation logistics, and a ready-to-use set of debriefing slides;
  • Highlights from background readings that will help both students and instructors gain a better understanding of negotiation concepts and methods covered in the simulation;
  • Pre- and post-simulation questionnaires instructors can use gauge each student’s grasp of the core concepts before and after participating in the simulation;
  • PowerPoint slides that introduce key concepts before the simulation and highlight lessons for debriefing;
  • Real time, interactive, data analytics provided via the iDecisionGames platform.

To order the PowerScreen Enhanced Package click here.

Sally Soprano I

NEW – ALL-IN-ONE CURRICULUM PACKAGE 

If you are new to teaching negotiation or are looking to go in-depth on the fundamental negotiation concepts, the Sally Soprano All-In-One Curriculum Package will provide you with everything you need to teach negotiation.

The All-In-One Curriculum Package makes it easy to teach negotiation, track learning outcomes, and includes materials for the instructor as well as for students.

Materials include: 

  • Instructor’s Guide – Guide for instructors on negotiation concepts, simulation logistics, and debriefing simulation participants.
  • Instructor Background Reading List – List of background readings for instructors to complete before using the simulation to gain a better understanding of the negotiation concepts.
  • Student Background Reading List – List of background readings for students to complete before the simulation to gain understanding of the negotiation concepts.
  • Confidential Role Instructions – Confidential role-specific materials for participants in the exercise.
  • Pre-Negotiation Surveys – After completing the background reading and/or presentation of the negotiation concepts, participants complete the online Pre-Negotiation Survey to benchmark their understanding of the key learning points the game is intended to teach.
  • Agreement Outcome Form – Participants reporting the results of any agreements reached in the simulation.
  • Post-Negotiation Survey – After finishing the simulation, but before the debrief, participants fill out the Post-Negotiation Survey so Instructors can gauge participants understanding of the issues and concepts.
  • Class PowerPoint Presentation – The first part of the PowerPoint slide deck is for the instructor to use to introduce negotiation concepts, how to participate in a negotiation simulation, and Sally Soprano. The second part is for the instructor to use in debriefing the simulation with participants.
  • Feedback Survey – At the conclusion of the exercise, participants can give feedback on the process and outcomes.

The Sally Soprano All-In-One Curriculum Package requires a minimum of 90 minutes of class time, but is best run in a two and half or three-hour class. To order this package, you must purchase a minimum of ten copies. A separate copy must be purchased for every participant in the exercise. The materials are all single use and must be re-purchased for subsequent uses.

SCENARIO

Sally Soprano is a distinguished soprano who is now somewhat past her prime. She has not had a lead role in two years but would like to revive her career. The Lyric Opera has a production scheduled to open in three weeks, but its lead soprano has become unavailable. Lyric’s representative has requested a meeting with Sally’s agent to discuss the possibility of hiring Sally for the production. Neither knows much about the other’s interests or alternatives. There is a wide range of possible outcomes.

NOTE This exercise is a modified version of the exercise Sally Swansong I, developed by Norbert S. Jacker and Mark N. Gordon. Sally Swansong I is still available upon request. The Spanish, Swedish, and Dutch translations are based on the original Sally Swansong exercise. See also Theotis Wiley, a variation of this simulation set in the context of a potential endorsement contract between a basketball player and an athletic shoe company.

TEACHING MATERIALS 

Materials for the standard version include:

  • Confidential Instructions for:
    • Sally Soprano’s Agent
    • Lyric Opera’s Business Manager
  • Post-negotiation handouts:
    • Some possible criteria for establishing salary
    • Some creative options
  • Teacher’s Package includes:
    • All of the above
    • Teaching Note

PROCESS THEMES Anchoring; Attorney/Client relations; Authority; BATNA; Bluffing; Confidentiality; Constituents; Fairness; Information exchange; Interests, dovetailing; Lawyering; Legitimacy; Meaning of “success”; Misrepresentation; Objective criteria; Offers, first; Options, generating; Pareto optimization; Precedents; Risk aversion; Risk perception; Systems of negotiation; Trust

MAJOR LESSONS

This exercise is an excellent vehicle for comparing principled negotiation and positional bargaining.

The knowledge that one’s BATNA is weak often leads people to negotiate much less vigorously than they otherwise would. Is this ever justified? If so, under what conditions? The case affords a good opportunity to point out that any such analyses should be based on a consideration of the parties’ relative BATNAs.

The available data allow a number of more or less equally persuasive arguments about what a “fair” salary would be. This is at a minimum good practice in developing and using objective criteria. Beyond that, the case presents the more difficult challenge of finding an objective basis with which to judge the applicability of alternative objective criteria.

Good negotiators put the distributive issues in this case in perspective and reduce their importance by dovetailing interests with creative options that expand the pie. This case has an enormous potential range of such creative options.

Since the case does have a strong competitive element, there is ample opportunity to explore techniques for indirectly and directly extracting information from the other side. Likewise, techniques of protecting oneself from “giving up” the possibility for gains that were unforeseen can be explored and discussed.

SIMILAR SIMULATIONS

 

ENHANCED VERSION AVAILABLE

A digitally enhanced version of this simulation is available through the iDecisionGames platform and includes the following features:

  • An Instructor’s Guide summarizing the negotiation concepts covered in the simulation, a quick review of simulation logistics, and a ready-to-use set of debriefing slides;
  • Highlights from background readings that will help both students and instructors gain a better understanding of negotiation concepts and methods covered in the simulation;
  • Pre- and post-simulation questionnaires instructors can use gauge each student’s grasp of the core concepts before and after participating in the simulation;
  • PowerPoint slides that introduce key concepts before the simulation and highlight lessons for debriefing;
  • Real time, interactive, data analytics provided via the iDecisionGames platform.

To order the Sally Soprano Enhanced Package click here.

Sally Soprano II

SCENARIO:

Basic facts are the same as in Sally Soprano I, except that as a result of a discussion between Sally and the Lyric Opera's Artistic Director, all available information is known by both sides. The principals have left their agents to work out the details of a deal, knowing that something mutually advantageous is possible.

NOTE: This exercise is a modified and improved version of the exercise Sally Swansong II, developed by Norbert S. Jacker, Deborah Winter and Bruce Patton. Sally Swansong II is still available upon request.

 

MECHANICS:

This negotiation is best one-on-one, although two-on-two is possible. Allow 10 to 30 minutes for negotiation. Sally II is usually done as a follow-up to Sally Soprano I with 5-10 minutes preparation and a 20 minute negotiation. The language of the case does not specify whether the negotiators are lawyers or not. Allow at least a half-hour for debriefing. Discussion can extend much longer (up to two hours).

 

MAJOR LESSONS:

This case is a litmus test of what participants believe, on an unconscious psychological level, constitutes success in a negotiation. Is it "winning," doing better than the other side, or is it achieving an objectively good outcome, one that satisfies your client's interests about as well as possible? Some participants with a competitive orientation will not settle this case, although that is against the interests of both clients. The question is usually framed, before handing out the case, "Would more information make this case easier or more difficult to negotiate? Participants' answers correspond to their orientation on "success"–"good outcome" negotiators say "easier", competitive bargainers say "harder."

 

TEACHING MATERIALS:

For all parties:

  • General Instructions

 

Teacher's Package:

  • All of the above
  • Teaching Note

 

PROCESS THEMES:

Anchoring; Attorney/Client relations; Authority; BATNA; Constituents; Fairness; Interests, dovetailing; Lawyering; Legitimacy; Meaning of "success"; Misrepresentation; Objective criteria; Offers, first; Options, generating; Pareto optimization; Precedents; Risk aversion; Risk perception; Systems of negotiation

Saving the Last Dance

Produced by the Program on Negotiation in collaboration with the Center for Mediation in Law, this video demonstrates the “Mediation through Understanding” mediation model as applied to a highly charged business conflict. Focusing on a dispute between a dance company and its recently discharged choreographer, which raises intellectual and employment issues, the video alternates between excerpts from the mediation itself and an educational commentary.

The Mediation through Understanding model seen here shows the mediator working together with the parties and their lawyers in plenary session, without caucuses or shuttle diplomacy. In this mediation model, the law plays an essential but not necessarily dominant role. The mediator encourages understanding of differing perspectives, concerns, interests and aspirations. On the basis of this understanding, the participants work together to generate creative options to resolve the dispute.

Gary Friedman, co-founder and co-director of the Center for Mediation in Law, demonstrates the approach. Jack Himmelstein (also a co-founder and co-director of the Center), and Harvard Law School Professor Robert H. Mnookin offer insights into the dynamics of the mediation, and explain how it illustrates principles of the model.

SAVING THE LAST DANCE SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIALS:

These materials are in the Adobe PDF format. You will need to have installed the Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to open these files. If you need this software, it can be downloaded from Adobe by clicking here.

Saving the Last Dance – Transcript (85.4 KB):

A complete transcript of the Saving the Last Dance video, including all mediation excerpts and educational commentary.

Saving the Last Dance – Written Supplement (136 KB)

A complete set of instructions for the role simulation on which the Saving the Last Dance video is based, including instructions for the Mediator, the choreographer Jackie, Dance Innovation’s Executive Director Mickey, Jackie’s attorney Connie, and Mickey’s attorney Joe. All parties’ instructions include copies of the original contract and the letter of discharge, and the attorneys’ instructions include confidential legal memoranda regarding the applicable case law.

Springfield OutFest

SCENARIO:

This simulation focuses on a dispute between two private organizations and a city over speech rights that will or won’t be granted as part of a permit for a festival on city property. It also explores the role of attorneys representing their clients in negotiated agreements around values-based disputes.

In Springfield OutFest, Springfield Pride is a local advocacy organization that supports the city of Springfield’s sizeable lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community. Springfield Pride’s largest event of the year, by far, is the OutFest, an annual street festival permitted by the city of Springfield to celebrate National Coming Out Day, to and support and affirm LGBT identity. In addition to drawing large, supportive crowds, the festival also attracts members of the public who oppose the message of the festival and LGBT lifestyles in general. One group in particular, Salvation Now!, is a nationwide network of grassroots religious and social campaigners who seek to bring their religious message directly to those they consider to be living sinful lifestyles. The local Salvation Now! organizers have been a regular and increasingly visible presence at the OutFest over the past several years, including last year. Salvation Now! members arrived at the OutFest, megaphones at the ready, and began broadcasting a message that many at the festival found offensive and hateful. Springfield Pride had organized a human buffer of numerous volunteers, who were prepared to to shield the crowd from the protesters. The volunteers carried massive signs to block the signs of the protesters and blew whistles to drown out their megaphones. As tensions mounted, the police arrested several Salvation Now! members for refusing to follow police instructions and disrupting the peace. Although these criminal charges were eventually dropped, the confrontation dampened the festival atmosphere and attracted quite a bit of unfavorable media attention to the city of Springfield and the OutFest.

The simulation begins one year later. Springfield Pride has just submitted its permit application for this year’s upcoming OutFest. Fearing either an escalation of last year’s confrontation or legal liability and court challenges, the city has requested a meeting with all parties to try to agree on some parameters and rules before this year’s festival.

 

TEACHING MATERIALS:

There are six roles to be assigned:

  • Springfield Pride (D. Jones, Chair of the OutFest Organizing Committee and R. Altman, Attorney for Springfield Pride)
  • Salvation Now! (B. Riley, Executive Director, Salvation Now! and G. Chiles, Attorney for Salvation Now!)
  • City of Springfield (C. Porter, Attorney and Head of the City Permitting Department)
  • Mediator

 

Teacher's Package Includes:

  • All of the above
  • Jennifer Gerarda Brown, Peacemaking in the Culture War Between Gay Rights and Religious Liberty, 95 Iowa Law Review 747 (2010).
  • Teaching notes

 

TEACHING POINTS:

The most important objective of this exercise is to demonstrate that assisted negotiation (i.e., mediation) can be used to resolve values-based disputes, not just interest-based disputes. With the assistance of a mediator, the parties and their attorneys can craft a settlement that does not require them to compromise their fundamental beliefs or values. Key teaching points include:

  • Avoiding threats to individual identity
  • Stressing the human element
  • Overarching values
  • Understanding the interests of the parties
  • Focusing on both short-term and longer-term solutions
  • Learning when is no agreement the best agreement

 

SIMILAR SIMULATIONS:

Springfield Outfest is one of a 3-part series of simulations focused on the mediation of values-based disputes. The other two simulations in the series are Ellis v. MacroB and Williams v. Northville.

If you wish to purchase all three simulations at a discount we have a bundle option available click here. You can also download a PDF version of "Teaching about the Mediation of Values-Based and Identity-Based Disputes".

Sue or Settle

SCENARIO:

Two surgeons mistakenly amputate the wrong (healthy) leg of a patient. They were found liable in a previous trial and ordered to pay $1 million in damages.

The controlling law in this case mandates a rule of strict contributory negligence. This means that whoever is found to be more responsible for the accident will have to pay the entire $1 million judgment. This exercise represents the current suit between the two surgeons to determine who will have to pay the judgment.

Each participant in this exercise plays either a surgeon or an attorney; and each surgeon-attorney pair is matched with a second surgeon-attorney pair in the lawsuit. The outcome of the lawsuit will be determined by comparing hands of playing cards. At each stage of the litigation, the surgeons must decide (with the advice of their attorneys) whether to proceed with the litigation or attempt to settle.

 

Teacher's Pack includes:

  • Confidential Instructions for the Client
  • Confidential Instructions for the Lawyer
  • No Teaching Note currently available

Super Slipster

SCENARIO:
This is a two-party negotiation between the attorney for an injured party (Adam Sidwell) and general counsel for a toy equipment manufacturer (Kiddie Craze, Inc., or KCI), regarding the possible settlement of a personal injury lawsuit. 42-year-old Sidwell was rendered a paraplegic after diving headfirst onto KCI's Super Slipster toy, a long plastic slide that becomes extremely slippery when wet. If the attorneys do not reach a settlement, the case will proceed to a jury trial.

 

TEACHING POINTS:

  • The tension between value creation and value distribution, along with basic distributive negotiation concepts such as reservation value, aspiration value, anchoring, best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA), and zone of possible agreement (ZOPA).
  • The importance of preparation. Each party is given a fairly large amount of information, much of it quantitative. These materials can be used to create objective criteria that could be useful during the negotiation.
  • The effects of information asymmetries and information disclosure and/or non-disclosure on the negotiation process.
  • The benefits and challenges inherent in negotiating as a representative rather than as a principal.
  • The dynamics particular to negotiating in the shadow of the law (i.e., when the alternative to reaching agreement is clearly litigation).

 

PARTICIPANT MATERIALS INCLUDE:

General Instructions for both parties


Confidential Instructions for:

  • Kiddie Craze, Inc.'s general counsel
  • Adam Sidwell's attorney

 

Teacher's Package Includes:

  • All of the above
  • Teaching note
  • Sample Seven-Element Preparation Sheet (handout)

Termination Tempest

SCENARIO:

Pat Thibideau had worked at Kane Restaurant Supply for fifteen years before being terminated at age 66. Thibideau sued Kane under the Federal Age Discrimination Act, alleging that the termination was pursuant to Kane's illegal mandatory retirement policy.

The case has been in court for approximately one year, and substantial discovery has been completed. At Kane's suggestion, the parties and their counsel are now meeting to discuss settlement.

 

Teaching points include:

  • The value of exploring the interests underlying state positions
  • The value of generating creative options for resolution
  • The tensions inherent in principal-agent relationships
  • The power of apology

 

Teacher's Pack Includes:

  • General Instructions

 

Confidential Instructions for

  • Thibideau
  • Thibideau's Counsel
  • Kane
  • Kane's Counsel
  • No teaching note currently available

Trask Divorce

SCENARIO:

Kate and Bill Trask are in the midst of divorce proceedings. Kate supported Bill through architectural school, but he has supported her for the last several years as she has stayed at home with the children, one of which has a developmental disability. At issue are the family home, a difference of opinion in how to care for the child, alimony, and child support. The pair’s attorneys have agreed to meet to discuss an out of court settlement.

 

MECHANICS:

Ideally this case is run as a one-on-one negotiation. However, making one or both sides a two person team can be interesting. Give participants approximately a quarter of an hour to prepare after distributing the instructions. The remainder of the hour should be spent negotiating. At least that amount of time should be spent on de-briefing.

 

MAJOR LESSONS:

  • This is a good case for exploring the alternate claims concerning financial support.
  • One of the parties in this negotiation has hidden several relevant facts, that would doubtless come out at trial. How this is handled in the negotiation provides an excellent opportunity to discuss the ethics of disclosure in a pre-trial settlement.

 

SUBJECTS:

Divorce, family, disclosure, support.

United States v. Dunlop

SCENARIO:

This case is a two-part negotiation involving four parties: a U.S. Attorney, an Assistant U.S. Attorney, a white-collar criminal defense attorney, and a white-collar criminal defendant. The first part of the case involves client interviews: the defense attorney interviews defendant Allen Dunlop, and the Assistant U.S. Attorney interviews the U.S. Attorney to determine their interests and how to represent them. The second part of the case involves a negotiation between the Assistant U.S. Attorney and the defense attorney about the fate of the defendant. An optional third part of the case may be used, in which the Assistant U.S. Attorney and the defense attorney brief their clients on the outcomes.

The case is a negotiation of a plea bargain agreement for a defendant accused of securities fraud. Specifically, the defendant is accused of violating Federal Securities Laws by employing manipulative and deceptive business practices to make his company’s stock (“Moonbeam, Inc.”) look more attractive to investors. The main issues to be decided in plea bargain negotiations are: what if any prison time will the defendant serve and in what type of facility, how much of a fine will he have to pay and to whom shall he pay the fine, and whether or not the defendant will have to accept a bar on serving as an officer or director of a public corporation in the future, and for how long will such a bar be effective. In addition to resolving these issues, both sides must deal with the tension between their own interests, the interests of the other side, and the interests of their clients.

 

MAJOR LESSONS:

  • This case involves attorney-client interaction. The participants playing the role of Assistant U.S. Attorney and defense attorney have to give their clients a thorough interview and gain their clients’ trust in order to successfully determine their interests. On the other side, the U.S. Attorney and the defendant must decide how much information to give their attorneys so that they negotiate the best outcome.
  • This case also involves principal-agent tension. The Assistant U.S. Attorney and defense attorney must reconcile the tension between their clients’ interests, their own interests, and the best interest of society.
  • The case illustrates relationship building. A successful outcome will account for the fact that the U.S. Attorney, the Assistant U.S. Attorney, and defense attorney will have to work together again frequently in the future.
  • The case provides many opportunities for value creation. Participants should find several options and combinations of agreements that can benefit both sides of the negotiation.

 

TEACHING MATERIALS:

Participant materials include:

  • Confidential Instructions for Defendant Allen Dunlop
  • Confidential Instructions for Dunlop's Attorney
  • Confidential Instructions for Assistant U.S. Attorney Janet Lee
  • Confidential Instructions for U.S. Attorney Mitch Rubin

 

Teacher's package includes:

  • All of the above
  • Teaching note

Welding Connection

SCENARIO:

Sam Solder is a 55-year-old welder previously employed by Airtight Welding. Recently, he was discharged under Airtight's "no tolerance" rule against the use of drugs in the workplace. Sam requested this grievance mediation under Airtight's labor agreement with the National Welder's Union because he believes he was discharged without just cause. If this mediation is not successful, Sam may request that his challenge to the discharge be arbitrated under the collective bargaining agreement. Additionally, he may file a claim with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).

 

PROCESS THEMES:

  • Partisan perceptions based on one's frame of reference and a lack of access to all of the relevant data
  • The influence of one's BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement) on mediation
  • Principal/ agent tensions arising from the sometimes differing interests of the principal and the agent.
  • The effectiveness of various mediation strategies on a grievance dispute

 

MATERIALS INCLUDE:

  • Confidential Instructions for Sam Solder
  • Confidential Instructions for the Representative of the National Welders Union
  • Confidential Instructions for Counsel for Airtight Welding
  • Confidential Instructions for the Mediator

 

Teacher's Package Includes:

  • All of the above
  • Teaching note

Williams v. Northville

SCENARIO:

This is a five-person, non-scoreable negotiation simulation focused on mediating values-based legal disputes, specifically disputes involving potentially conflicting interests around issues of homosexuality and religious faith. Based on a real case, this simulation focuses on a dispute between a public school and parents over classroom discussions and materials depicting same-sex couples and their families. It also explores the role of attorneys representing their clients in negotiated agreements around values-based disputes.

In Williams vs. Northville, Jim and Jan Williams are the parents of two elementary school children in the Northville Public School System. A dispute arose between the Williamses and the school system about materials in the school's diversity curriculum that presented homosexual relationships and families headed by same-sex couples. J. Williams asked the school principal, S. Smith, for advance notification anytime homosexuality, same-sex marriage, or families headed by same-sex couples would be raised in class and that the Williams children be excused from class during these discussions. Principal Smith denied Williams' request, explaining that no parental notification was required to discuss homosexual families in class in this way.

The Williamses filed a lawsuit against the school district in state court asserting a parental right to have their sons excused from the parts of the curriculum that were contrary to their religious beliefs. The judge in the state trial court resolved the legal situation raised by the Williamses in favor of the school district, holding that parents do not have the right to restrict what a public school may teach their children. This simulation begins at the point where the Williamses have filed an appeal to the lower court's decision. Prior to oral argument in the case, the administrator of the appellate court mediation program has urged the parties to attempt to mediate the dispute.

 

MATERIALS INCLUDED:

  • Participant Materials include:
  • General Instructions for all Parties

 

Confidential Instructions for:

  • J. Williams, parent (negotiating on behalf of his/her spouse)
  • S. Smith, Northville Elementary School principal
  • L. Gibbs, attorney to J. Williams (MassResistance)
  • M. Gonzalez, attorney to S. Smith (City of Northville)
  • C. Nichols, court-appointed mediator

 

Teacher's Package includes:

  • All of the above
  • Jennifer Gerarda Brown, Peacemaking in the Culture War Between Gay Rights and Religious Liberty, 95 Iowa Law Review 747 (2010).
  • Teaching Notes

 

TEACHING POINTS:

The key teaching objective is to demonstrate that assisted negotiation (i.e., mediation) can be used to resolve values-based disputes, not just interest-based disputes. With the assistance of a mediator, the parties and their attorneys can craft a settlement that does not require them to compromise their fundamental values. Key teaching points include the importance in values-based disputes of avoiding threats to individual identity, stressing the human element, focusing on ongoing relationships, focusing on overarching values, and focusing on individual interests as well as values.


SIMILAR SIMULATIONS:

Williams v. Northville is one of a 3-part series of simulations focused on the mediation of values-based disputes. The other two simulations in the series are Ellis v. MacroB and Springfield OutFest.

If you wish to purchase all three simulations at a discount we have a bundle option available click here. You can also download a PDF version of "Teaching about the Mediation of Values-Based and Identity-Based Disputes".