Mark AnsteyMark Anstey grew up in Zimbabwe, working there briefly before moving to South Africa in 1977. This book draws on his learning as an academic, but more especially on insights he acquired in the multiple labour and community mediations, strategic plannng and relationship building processes he facilitated in South Africa between 1984 and 2019. He has over forty years of experience in training business leaders, trade unionists, social workers, educationists, community and political activists, police officers, government officials and diplomats in negotiation and mediation. He served on South Africa's National Peace Accord structures during the nation's political transition and was Director of Monitoring (Eastern Cape) for the Independent Electoral Commission in its historic 1994 elections. He is an Emeritus Professor of Nelson Mandela University (where he lectured from 1987-2017); a Senior Academy Associate of Clingendael, the Netherlands Institute of International Relations; a member of the Steering Committee of the Processes of International Negotiation (PIN) Program; and a senior fellow with the University of Kent's Conflict Analysis Research Centre. He was a Professor with Michigan State University in Dubai (2008-11) and has taught at the Universities of Witwatersrand, Cape Town, Stellenbosch and Kent. He holds a Master's degree in Social Work (Witwatersrand) and PhD in labour relations/organisational behaviour (University of Port Elizabeth). He has worked with people struggling through conflict situations across Africa, the Middle East, the Philippines, as well as Europe and North America. His books include: Negotiating Reconciliation in Peace-making: Quandaries of Relationship Building with Valerie Rosoux (Springer 2017); The Slippery Slope to Genocide: Reducing Identity Conflicts and Preventing Mass Murder with William Zartman and Paul Meerts (Oxford University Press 2012); Managing Change, Negotiating Conflict (Juta 2006) three editions 1991-2006; and Collective Bargaining in the Workplace (2011) with John Grogan and Tembeka Ngcukaitobi. His earlier books include: Employee Participation and Workplace Forums (1997); Practical Peace-making (1993); Worker Participation: South African Options and Experiences (1990) and Working with Groups (1983) all through Jutas, Cape Town. Read More Read Less
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