Cover of: Strategic Barriers to Dispute Resolution: A Comparison of Bilateral and Multilateral Negotiations
Robert H. Mnookin

Strategic Barriers to Dispute Resolution: A Comparison of Bilateral and Multilateral Negotiations

Section: Articles
Volume 159 (2003) / Issue 1, pp. 199-220 (22)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/0932456032974916
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Summary
This paper compares strategic barriers to the resolution of conflict – those that may arise because rational self-interested actors try to maximize individual returns – in two party and multi-party negotiations. It suggests that the Pareto-criterion may not provide an appropriate standard to evaluate efficiency in multiparty bargaining because a requirement of unanimity may create potential holdout problems that pose severe strategic barriers. While a variety of procedural rules may permit decision-making without unanimity, the paper briefly explores the application of an unusual procedural rule – the »sufficient consensus« standard – that was employed in the multiparty »constitutional« negotiations in South Africa and in Northern Ireland.