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20 Negot. J. 171 (2004)
Transitions through Out-of-Keeping Acts

handle is hein.journals/nejo20 and id is 165 raw text is: 












                    Transitions through

                    Out-of-Keeping Acts


       Kathleen L. McGinn, Elizabeth Long Lingo,
                          and   Karin Ciano






     Within a negotiation, when an act by one party is out-of-keeping with
     the previous moves and underlying logic of the interaction, the act and
     those that follow hold the potential for creating a transition to a new
     logic of interaction. In this paper we investigate the presence and role
     of seven distinct types of transitions resulting from out-of-keeping acts
     across ten complex legal negotiations. The data reveal that a critical
     feature differentiating across the types is the abruptness/gradualness
     of the transition. We explore the combination of relational, informa-
     tional, and procedural acts comprising the transitions and find that
     all three components are present across transitions, but in different pro-
     portions and orders. Understanding the role of out-of-keeping acts in
     negotiations facilitates a more complete picture of the microprocesses
     involved in the creation of critical moments in negotiations.





Coordinated action is   oriented  toward  and based  on making  sense  of the
environmental  and  social challenges at hand. At the heart of the coordinated
action that makes  up  every negotiation lies an often unstated logic for the



Kathleen L. McGinn is a professor at Harvard Business School, Soldiers Field, Boston, MA 02163;
e-mail: kmcginn@hbs.edu.
Elizabeth Long Lingo is a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard Business School.
Karin Ciano is a graduate of New York University School of Law. She practiced law for several
years before teaching with NYU Law's first-year Lawyering Program. While at NYU, she and other
lawyering faculty worked to review and develop the negotiation exercise studied in this article.


10.111 1/j.0748 4526.2004.00000.x @ 2004 Blackwell Publishing


Negotiation Journal AptV2004 171

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