Verkauf durch Sack Fachmedien

Rack

Latino-Anglo Bargaining

Culture, Structure and Choice in Court Mediation

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-0-415-64962-9
Verlag: Routledge
Erscheinungstermin: 10.09.2012
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage

This book shows the mechanisms by which cultural differences reinforce structural privilege and disadvantage in the informal process of mediated negotiation. Are all people equally likely to pursue their own material self-interest in the negotiation process used in small claims mediation? Did Latinos and Anglos bargain more generously with members of their own group? The central questions, derived from theories of ethnic and gender differences, concerned how, and to what degree; culture, structure, and individual choice operated to alter the goals, bargaining process and outcomes, expressed motivations and outcome evaluations for outsider groups. This book demonstrates how there are real cultural differences in the way that Latinos and Anglos pursue monetary justice that defy dominant assumptions that all culture groups are equally likely to maximize their own outcomes at the expense of others.


Produkteigenschaften


Autoren/Hrsg.

Autoren

Chapter One: Small Claims Mediation
Chapter Two: The Cultural Environment
Chapter Three: The MetroCourt Project & Data
Chapter Four: Materialism, Forum Influence, and Reported Goals for Ethnic and Gender Minorities
Chapter Five: Negotiated Monetary Outcomes and Court Alternatives
Chapter Six: Status Patterns in the Bargaining Process
Chapter Seven: Motivational Indicator Analysis
Chapter Eight: Ethgender Bargaining and Expectations
Chapter Nine: Case Studies Illustrating Collectivistic Bargaining and Female Poaching Power
Chapter Ten: Summary, Discussion, and Implications
Appendix A: The Influence of Mediator Alignment on Monetary Outcomes and Reported Satisfaction
Appendix B: Tables
Appendix C: Glossary