View by:
-
View Details
Restoring the American Dream: A Working Families’ Agenda for America
This call to action for families, business, labor, and government outlines ways in which we can empower working families to earn a good living by doing satisfying work while still having time for family and community life -
View Details
Seven Secrets for Negotiating with Government:How to Deal with Local, State, National, or Foreign Governments--and Come Out Ahead
Addresses the key variables involved in negotiating with government, from the influence of bureaucracy to the perception of power on the government side of the negotiating table -
Case Studies & ArticlesView Details
Stuart Eizenstat: Negotiating the Final Accounts of World War IIGreat Negotiator Case Study Series
Jeswald Salacuse and Kristin Schneeman
-
Role SimulationsView Details
Legal Role-Play:
Super Slipster
Matt Smith under the supervision of Robert C. Bordone, with revisions by Michael Moffitt
Two-party personal injury settlement negotiation between the attorney for the injured plaintiff and general counsel for the defendant toy manufacturing company -
Role SimulationsView Details
Environmental Role-Play:
The Mercury Negotiation SimulationExplore the consequences of representing scientific uncertainty in a policy context
Leah C. Stokes, Lawrence Susskind, and Noelle E. Selin
This mercury game is a role-play simulation aimed at scientists, students and decision makers. Playing the game will help participants explore the consequences of representing scientific uncertainty in various ways in a policy context. -
Role SimulationsView Details
Business and Commercial Role-Play:
Viatex
Hal Movius
Two-party negotiation between representatives of Viatex and one of its clients, Brattlebury, involving trade-offs between short and long-term gains as well as dealing with internal stakeholders. -
View Details
Water DiplomacyA Negotiated Approach to Managing Complex Water Networks
Shafiqul Islam and Lawrence E. Susskind
In this book, the authors show how open and constantly changing water networks can be managed successfully using collaborative adaptive techniques to build informed agreements among disciplinary experts, water users with conflicting interests, and governmental bodies with countervailing claims.