Mediation and Foreign Policy

Mediation and Foreign Policy

Author(s): Robert Nagel, Govinda Clayton
Book Title: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
Series: Oxford Research Encyclopedias
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
Publication Year: 2017
Publication Place: Oxford

Mediation is now the most popular form of conflict management, and it has proven to be an effective means of resolving inter- and intrastate disputes. This article offers an overview of mediation in foreign policy. We first highlight which actors tend to perform mediatory roles, emphasizing the relative strengths and weaknesses of individual, state, and international organization mediators. Next we discuss the supply and demand of mediation, identifying the key conditions that promote third parties’ efforts to offer mediatory assistance and belligerents to accept the help of an intermediary. We then discuss the process and varying methods used by mediators, highlighting the range of actions from relatively soft facilitative mediation, up to more manipulative approaches. Finally we discuss the outcomes that mediation tends to produce and the conditions that influence the effectiveness of this preeminent foreign policy tool.
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