Article Summary of "Cultural Aspects of Disputing" by Sally Engle Merry
Citation: Merry, Sally Engle. "Cultural Aspects of Disputing." PCR Occasional Papers Series: 1987-2. Program on Conflict Resolution. Manoa: University of Hawaii, 1987. Pp. 1-20.
This Article Summary written by: Mariya Yevsyukova, Conflict Research Consortium
Conflict resolution techniques used in the United States reflect the cultural norms of
this society. In this paper, Sally Engle Merry analyzes the following components of the
cultural framework of interpersonal conflict resolution: "conceptions of disputing
and the dispute resolution process, conceptions of the self, and conceptions of the
legitimacy of third party intervenors" (p. 2). She compares the American framework
with that of Asian-Pacific societies. Culture reveals itself through explicit rules of
behavior and implicit meanings. It frames one's perceptions of self and others.
Concepts of Disputing and Dispute Resolution.
The metaphor for American mediation is the contract. The main goal of the process is to
satisfy parties' interests and reach win-win agreement. Even agreements between parents
and teenagers are written in a contractual form which sets up rules for their interaction.
The goal of the mediator is to identify the issues of the conflict on which an agreement
can be reached. The parties have a goal of protecting their interests. Emotional issues
are usually referred to the counselor.
The traditional Hawaiian way of resolving conflict, "Ho'oponopono," has a
metaphor of disentangling relationships. The goal of the process is to restore
relationships damaged by the conflict. If successful, it results in a
"reciprocal-forgiveness exchange" (p. 5). The process evolves around parties'
feelings and emotions.
Correspondingly, compromise is also perceived very differently in those two cultures.
For North Americans compromise involves a perception of losing something, of giving in (p.
5), while in Ho'oponopono tradition it means reaching for each other, restoring the net of
broken interpersonal ties.
In urban areas of Japan, mediation is used for the purpose of pursuing personal
interests, and is institutionalized. Thus, a conclusion can be made about the urban-rural
differences of the cultural framework of dispute resolution: while in rural settings the
mediation metaphor is disentangling, in urban it is the contract. The author believes that
a better way to characterize these two models is to look at them in the context of
"easy exit" versus "no-exit societies." In "easy exit"
cultures, people do not have as many incentives to work on restoring the relationships and
compromising their feelings, since they often can abandon those relationships without much
cost for themselves. In "no-exit" cultures people are more interdependent upon
each other; the cost of leaving the relationships is much higher.
The process of mediation in these two types of cultures is also different. In the US,
the time for mediation is prescheduled and is devoted to just mediation without
possibility of more general conversation. According to Lederach, in Central American
cultures the time is used more freely; so parties can discuss different topics, even
unrelated to issues of mediation. It allows them to establish better mutual understanding
without "rapid self-disclosure," toward which Northern American model pressures
the parties.
Conceptions of the Self
American society looks at the self as an autonomous individual. The individual has
rights which the state protects. Traditional societies define self in terms of his or her
relations to others, and often puts group interests above the individual ones.
The Legitimacy of Third Party Intervention
In traditional societies, the legitimacy of the mediator rests on his social status
within the group, knowledge of traditions and personal characteristics. For example, in
one of the tribes of the Solomon Islands, elders fulfill the role of gwaunga'i or
counselors, whose duties include mediation. American mediators derive their authority from
"competence, knowledge, and procedural expertise" (p. 18). Their power is in
their "impersonality, formal equality of treatment, reference to knowledge and
expertise, and obedience to an impersonal order rather than a particular individual"
(p. 19). Thus, while American mediators exercise legal-rational authority, their
colleagues in "small-scale societies" are dependent on traditional, and less on
charismatic and religious authority.
In the USA mediation, in spite of its early claim to "replace the legitimate
authority of the law with the legitimate authority of the community," became a part
of legal bureaucratic structure with similar sources of legitimacy (p. 19).
Conclusion
Cultural frameworks and social structures are interrelated and influence each other's
development. Often governments attempt to institutionalize traditional establishments or
use traditional approaches to introduce new social structures. The Indonesian government's
efforts to introduce collective rural labor and an informal justice system using the
language of indigenous institutions and traditional values, as well as the American
movement to informalize interpersonal dispute resolution through creating neighborhood
justice centers, are examples.
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