Unit 3 - Lesson 9 - Chapter 8 Flashcards
Union-management negotiations usually proceed through specific stages:
- the pre-negotiation stage
- the stage of establishing the negotiating range
- the stage of narrowing the bargaining range
- the crisis stage
- the ratification stage
The actual negotiations proceed through three specific stages:
the stage of establishing the negotiating range
the stage of narrowing the bargaining range
the crisis stage preceding the decision to settle or to invoke economic sanctions such as a strike or lockout.
Aborting or short-circuiting any stage in the negotiation process can cause
the process to end abruptly or to fail to produce an agreement.
Pre-negotiation Stage
In this stage, each side determines its priorities, goals, and proposals for the upcoming negotiations.
Establishing the Negotiating Range
This stage of bargaining typically begins at the first formal bargaining session, where all the representatives of both parties are present. In this stage, both parties introduce their bargaining team members and present their proposals. Usually, the chief negotiator for each side orally presents the rationale for each proposal to the other side.
These oral presentations serve several purposes.
One is to establish the negotiating range by identifying the issues of importance to each side and stating what each side initially intends to achieve on these issues.
Another purpose of these presentations is to demonstrate the degree of commitment each side has to its own positions.
Finally, these presentations provide an opportunity for each side to explain the reasoning behind its proposals and positions and thereby influence the perceptions and expectations of the other side.
Narrowing the Bargaining Range
The activities in the stage when the bargaining range is narrowed are perhaps best illustrated by the zone of agreement model.
The timing of counter-proposals and concessions is crucial during the narrowing stage of bargaining.
It is important for both sides to fully exhaust their arguments for their own positions. It is only when those discussions are thoroughly concluded that any movement from a position becomes timely.
This back-and-forth discussion, combined with the time each team spends in private meetings, means that narrowing the bargaining range is often the
longest of all the bargaining stages.
The Crisis Stage
During the crisis stage of negotiations, one or both sides must decide whether to settle or whether to use economic sanctions such as a strike or lockout to pressure the other side into agreeing to its demands.
Ratification
Once mutually acceptable contract terms are agreed upon, both sides must obtain ratification of the tentative agreement. During ratification, the negotiating teams return to the constituencies they represent and present the negotiated contract terms for the constituencies’ approval
The constituencies represented by the management negotiating team will want to be sure that the negotiated terms do not make the organization
less efficient or less productive.
The union negotiators will want to have satisfied the legitimate and specific needs of the members, and they must assure
members that the negotiated contract terms address these needs.
Generally, the union will conduct a ratification vote among its
membership on whether to accept the negotiated agreement
management will contact all relevant stakeholders to ensure that the terms of the negotiated agreement are
acceptable
Pre-negotiation Summary
Parties determine and prioritize bargaining issues and determine desired outcomes
Establishing the negotiating range Summary
Parties meet and exchange initial offers Parties adjust expectations based on the other side’s offers
Narrowing the negotiating range Summary
Parties discuss offers and develop and exchange counter-proposals
Crisis Summary
Parties disagree over items One side may decide to start strike or lockout to pressure the other side into agreeing to its terms One side must agree to other side’s proposal for the crisis stage to be resolved, after which parties settle a tentative agreement
Ratification Summary
Parties take the agreement to their constituencies for approval
subprocesses of bargaining
intra- organizational bargaining.
attitudinal structuring
integrative bargaining
distributive bargaining
Whether attitudinal structuring results in positive or negative attitudes depends on such factors as
each team’s knowledge of or experience with members of the other team; each team’s perception of how difficult it will be to negotiate certain issues; and any previous bargaining history shared by the two sides
during the integrative bargaining subprocess, the parties focus on
what they have in common, rather than on where they differ, and try to develop solutions that benefit both sides, rather than having one party “win” and the other party “lose.”
The Intra-organizational Bargaining Subprocess
The intra-organizational bargaining subprocess involves the internal relationships that exist within each organization and bargaining team. It is thus distinct from the other three subprocesses, which involve external relationships between the union and management during negotiations.
During the intra-organizational bargaining subprocess, two main types of internal conflict appear
role conflict and factional conflict.
Role conflict occurs because
there are conflicting expectations for each side’s chief negotiator