Interest-Based Bargaining: A Users Guide
Barrett, Jerome T.
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Add to basketSold by ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since July 2, 2009
Condition: Used - Very good
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketMay have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
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By the late 1960s, as campus and community violence gained everyone's attention, he published several articles explaining how civil rights and antiwar disputants could use the labour-management model to resolve their disputes peacefully.
In 1969, after five years as a federal mediator, he joined the newly created National Centre for Dispute Settlement to mediate civil rights, campus, and community disputes. As union organising of public employees increased in the early 1970s, Barrett joined the Department of Labour to head a new office providing advice to state and local governments and their unions on establishing procedures for resolving disputes. During that period, he wrote extensively about that rapidly developing field.
In 1973, he returned to FMCS to head the newly created Office of Technical Assistance to manage mediator training, preventive mediation, and the start of FMCS work outside the labour-management field. In the early 1980s, he left FMCS to teach labour relations at Northern Kentucky University and complete his doctoral degree in human resource development with a dissertation on the history of joint labour-management training with a focus on FMCS and its predecessor, the U.S. Conciliation Service. While teaching, Barrett began an arbitration practice and did overseas consulting on labour relations and ADR. He would eventually work in twenty-four countries.
His other education includes a B.A. from the College of St. Thomas and an M.A. from the University of Minnesota. In the mid-1980s, he returned to the Department of Labour's Bureau of Labour Management and Cooperative Programmes, where he developed the Partners in Change programme for FMCS to assist labour and management in enhancing their cooperative efforts.
He also created an interest-based bargaining program called P.A.S.T. and an accompanying training programme, which he has since used hundreds of times. He introduced FMCS mediators to interest-based bargaining (IBB) with his P.A.S.T. training model, helping to start what is now an extensive FMCS programme.
Since leaving the government in 1988, Barrett has written, arbitrated, trained, and facilitated. He has written two books on IBB and produced an IBB video with the University of Wisconsin. In 2004, he wrote A History of Alternative Dispute Resolution: the story of a political, cultural, and social movement, which was published by Jossey Bass.
He served as historian of the Society of Professionals in Dispute Resolution and FMCS. For the past three years, he has written an ADR history column for the ACResolution quarterly magazine. For the past seven years, he has been an elected school board member in Falls Church, Virginia, where he lives with his wife, Rose. They have five sons and five grandchildren.
John O'Dowd is a consultant and facilitator specializing in industrial and employee relations. Much of his work lies in helping employers and trade unions to work together to develop better industrial relations and to develop effective ways of handling change together in the workplace. Through John O'Dowd Consultants Ltd he provides a range of consulting, training, facilitation and mediation services to employers and trade unions. His website is www.johnodowd.com. He brings to his work a deep practical and theoretical
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