000 01548nab a22002897a 4500
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005 20221123181950.0
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022 _a0017-8012
040 _cMANILA TYTANA COLLEGES LIBRARY
100 _aBears, Alison.
245 0 0 _aLife's work /
_cAlison Beard
260 _cJune 2015.
440 _aHarvard Business Review
_n93 : 6, page 124
520 _aAn interview with retired U.S. Senator George Mitchell is presented. Mitchell was a working-class boy from Maine who grew up to be the majority leader of the U.S. Senate and, as envoy to Northern Ireland, one of the most respected peace negotiators in the world. Now 81, he explains his ethos in a memoir out this month. When attempting to start a dialog with warring factions, Mitchell said the challenge is not to get them to talk, because everybody will talk, but to get them to listen. Mitchell said an individual's authority is derived largely from the respect and trust that person has been able to generate. Mitchell believes there's no such thing as a conflict that can't be ended. He said conflicts are created, conducted, and sustained by human beings; they can be ended by human beings.
521 _aBusiness
650 _aConflict management.
650 _aProblem solving.
650 _aPublic officials.
650 _aPersonal profiles.
650 _aPeace negotiations.
650 _aCareers.
650 _aConflict resolutions.
650 _aUnited States.
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