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Conflict

Summary: Conflict is a state of opposition between two parties. 1 Definitions 2 Types and Modes of Conflict 3 Examples of Conflict 4 See also: Definitions In political terms, "conflict" refers to an ongoing state of hostility between two groups of people. Conflict as taught for graduate and professional work in conflict resolution commonly has the definition: "when two or more parties, with perce ...

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Conflict

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Conflict is a state of opposition between two parties.

Table of contents
1 Definitions
2 Types and Modes of Conflict
3 Examples of Conflict
4 See also:

Definitions

In political terms, "conflict" refers to an ongoing state of hostility between two groups of people.

Conflict as taught for graduate and professional work in conflict resolution commonly has the definition: "when two or more parties, with perceived incompatible goals, seek to undermine each other's goal-seeking capability".

The distinction between the presence and absence of conflict should not be confused with the difference between competition and cooperation. In competitive situations, the two or more parties have goals that are not consistent with one another, so that when either party tries to reach their goal it will undermine the attempts of the other to reach theirs. Therefore, competitive situations will by their nature will cause conflict. However, conflict can also occur in cooperative situations, in which two or more parties have consistent goals, because the manner in which one party tries to reach their goal can still undermine the other's attempt.

Types and Modes of Conflict

A conceptual conflict can escalate into a verbal exchange and/or result in fighting.

Conflict can exist at a variety of levels of analysis:

  • intrapersonal conflict (though this usually just gets delegated out to psychology)
  • interpersonal conflict
  • group conflict
  • organizational conflict
  • community conflict
  • intra-state conflict (i.e. civil war)
  • international conflict
Conflicts in these levels may appear "nested" in conflicts residing at larger levels of analysis. For example, conflict within a work team may play out the dynamics of a broader conflict in the organization as a whole. (See Marie Dugan's article on Nested Conflict. John Paul Lederach has also written on this.) (I'll come back to give hypertext links to those later.) Theorists have claimed that responses to conflict can be conceptualized according to a two dimensional scheme; concern for one's own outcomes and concern for the outcomes of the other party. This scheme leads to the following hypotheses: High concern for both one's and the other party's outcomes leads to attempts to find mutually beneficial solutions. High concern for one's outcomes only leads to attempts to "win" the conflict. High concern for other's outcomes only leads to allowing the other to "win" the conflict. No concern for either side's outcomes leads to attempts to avoid the conflict. In Western society, practitioners usually suggest that attempts to find mutually beneficial solutions lead to the most satisfactory outcomes, but this may not hold true for many Asian societies.

Several theorists detect successive phases in the development of conflicts.

Examples of Conflict

The Vietnam Conflict became in all aspects but semantics a war.

The Arab-Israeli conflict forms a historic and ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinian interests. See also Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The Catholic-Protestant conflict in Northern Ireland furnishes an example of another notable historic conflict. See Bloody Sunday (Northern Ireland 1972) Many conflicts have a racial or ethnic basis. This would include such conflicts as the Bosnian-Croatian conflict (see Kosovo and Metohia), the conflict in Rwanda, and the conflict in Kazakhstan Class conflict forms an important topic in much Marxist thought.

Another type of conflict exists between governments and guerrilla groups or groups engaged in asymmetric warfare.

See also:

Compare competition, dispute.


The name Conflict may also refer to an anarcho-punk band; see Conflict (band).

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