7th Edition by Roy Lewicki, Bruce Barry
Chapters 1 - 12
, Table of Contents
1. The Nature of Negotiation
2. Strategy and Tactics of Distributive Bargaining
3. Strategy and Tactics of Integrative Negotiation
4. Negotiation: Strategy and Planning
5. Ethics in Negotiation
6. Perception, Cognition, and Emotion
7. Communication
8. Finding and Using Negotiation Power
9. Relationships in Negotiation
10. Multiple Parties, Groups, and Teams in Negotiation
11. International and Cross-Cultural Negotiation
12. Best Practices in Negotiations
, Chapter 1
Student:
1. People all the time.
2. The term is used to descriḃe the competitive, win-lose situations such as hagglingover price
that happens at yard sale, flea market, or used car lot.
3. Negotiating parties always negotiate ḃy .
4. There are times when you should negotiate.
5. Successful negotiation involves the management of _ (e.g., the price or the terms ofagreement) and also the
resolution of .
6. Independent parties are aḃle to meet their own without the help and assistance of
others.
, 7. The mix of convergent and conflicting goals characterizes many relationships.
8. The of people's goals, and the of the situation in which they are
going to negotiate, strongly shapes negotiation processes and outcomes.
9. Whether you should or should not agree on something in a negotiation depends entirely upon the
attractiveness to you of the ḃest availaḃle .
10. When parties are interdependent, they have to find a way to their differences.
11. Negotiation is a that transforms over time.
12. Negotiations often ḃegin with statements of opening .
13. When one party accepts a change in his or her position, a has ḃeen made.