Inter-nation Conflict, Dyadic and Mediated


Book Description

Using a mediated stimulus-response model for basic organization, fourteen hypotheses dealing with dyadic and mediated conflict behavior in an international crisis are presented. The hypotheses describing dyadic conflict behavior, seven in number, are concerned with three sub-topics of this general area: (1) the effects of violence; (2) the antecedents of hostile perception; and (3) the effects of hostile perception. The seven hypotheses describing patterns of interaction in the triad may be divided into two sub-topics: (1) hypotheses describing the perceiver's relationship with the mediator; and (2) hypotheses describing perception of the relationship between the mediator and the perceiver's enemy. (Author).
















Mediation of International Conflicts


Book Description

This book examines the use of third-party mediation as a conflict resolution method. In an attempt to explain why some, but not all, conflicts are mediated, this work argues that diverse conflict structures are inherently different in their susceptibility to mediation attempts. By offering a systematic method for measuring the transformability of conflict structures, this book contributes to our understanding of the sufficient and necessary conditions for mediation. In addition, the study offers an analytical framework for the examination of mediation as a trilateral rational bargaining process. Although the general concept of mediation as a three-person game is not new, most studies focus on either the disputants' perspectives or the mediator's perspective. In contrast, this study integrates the perspectives of all three parties. The framework links the different stages involved in the whole process of mediation, from the onset of mediation, through the mediation strategies used, to the outcome, rather than focusing on one particular aspect. The book applies the framework to two case studies – the conflict between Israel and Egypt and the conflict between India and Pakistan – and provides new insights into these conflicts from a mediation perspective. In general, the model developed here provides a framework for systematically assessing conflicts and the options available to those involved in the mediation process. This book will be of much interest to students of conflict resolution, mediation, war and conflict studies, Asian politics, Middle Eastern politics and IR in general.




Inter-nation Conflict, Dyadic and Mediated: Case Studies of Egypt, Israel, and the United Nations at Five Points in Time (phase Two: October 28-november 25, 1956).


Book Description

This report represents an interim statement on research accomplished during the second phase of the study, covering the period 1 October 1965-30 September 1966. Chapter One of this report describes the historical background of the Suez crisis and carries the narrative through the entire five periods of this study. Nearly seventy-five thousand words of documents authored by top leaders in Egypt and Israel during periods two (28 October-10 November 1956) and three (11 November-25 November 1956) were content analyzed by the IBM 7090 computer. A preliminary report on these attitudinal data is presented in Chapter Two. The results of scaling action data for the period 25 October-25 November 1956 is reported in Chapter Three. A technique for scaling international events and for comparing the results of two or more situations is described in Chapter Four. Chapter Five reports on the content analysis program developed during the past year which resolves a number of difficulties previously existing. Chapter Six summarizes a theoretical study on a concept of major importance to our analysis of the Middle East crisis: hostility. (Author).




International Conflict Mediation


Book Description

This book examines how new empirical approaches to mediation can shed fresh light on the effectiveness of different patterns of conflict management, and offers guidelines on the process of international mediation. International conflict mediation has become one of, if not the most prominent and important conflict resolution methods of the early 21st century. This book argues that traditional approaches to mediation have been inadequate, and that in order to really understand how the process of international mediation works, studies need to operate within an explicit theoretical framework, adopt systematic empirical approaches and use a diversity of methods to identify critical interactions, contexts and relationships. This volume captures recent important changes in the field of international conflict mediation, and includes essays by leading scholars on a variety of critical aspects of conflict management, using state of the art analytical tools and up to date data. This book will of great interest to scholars of peace and conflict studies, methods in social science, and of International Relations in general.




Inter-nation Conflict, Dyadic and Mediated: Case Studies of Egypt, Israel, and the United Nations at Five Points in Time. Phase Three: October 1-september 30, 1966


Book Description

The report represents an interim statement on the third phase of a study of Arab-Israeli conflict undertaken during the period October 1, 1966-September 30, 1967. Coding and keypunching of all documents for the 1956-57 period of the conflict were completed and content analysis was undertaken on the IBM 7090 computer. Further developments in scaling of action data were completed with the collaboration of two professional statisticians. Refinements were made in the computerized content analysis and steps undertaken to adapt the system for the IBM 360-67.




International Mediation Interaction


Book Description

Among other influences, a specific set of factors, which are related to the belligerents, any third parties that intervene, or both of them, determine whether a conflict is likely to see mediation efforts in the first place and ultimately the prospects for successful mediation outcomes. However, although there is an extensive body of literature, previous research has rarely addressed the interaction between these actors in conflict and mediation attempts, i.e., how both belligerents and/or mediating parties are tied to each other and how they coordinate an intervention. In order to address these shortcomings, Tobias Böhmelt examines four interrelated, albeit different issues of actors’ interaction in international mediation as a tool for settling conflicts peacefully. The book will be of interest to students and scholars of political science and international relations with an emphasis on conflict resolution as well as for practitioners of third-party conflict resolution methods.