cover image Bargaining with the Devil: When to Negotiate, When to Fight

Bargaining with the Devil: When to Negotiate, When to Fight

Robert Mnookin. Simon & Schuster, $27 (320pp) ISBN 978-1-4165-8332-5

Mnookin, head of Harvard's Program on Negotiation, combines business, history, philosophy and psychology to present a complete set of tools for confronting ""Devils,"" defined as any individual perceived as a harmful adversary. Examining eight conflicts, including Winston Churchill's decision to reject negotiations with Adolf Hitler, Nelson Mandela's decision to initiate discussions with South Africa's apartheid government, IBM's discovery that its largest competitor copied its software, poisoned labor-management issues in the San Francisco Symphony, and examples from his professional experience, Mnookin (Beyond Winning) provides a straightforward account of the deliberative options when facing a ""Faustian tension between pragmatism and principle."" Along with cogent analysis, Mnookin suggests four general guidelines for determining the best course of action: systematically compare the cost-benefit ratios of negotiating or fighting, collect advice from others, tip the scales in favor of negotiation before fully committing, and don't allow moral intuition to override pragmatic assessment. While Mnookin admits his suggestions are ""hardly the last word,"" they will help decision-makers focus their thoughts in challenging situations.