Research and Evaluation
Funders, conveners,
and participants want to know: Are groups collaborating effectively?
Can they improve the way they work together? What will it take to
produce better results? Similarly, academics and practitioners want to
know: Are established consensus building techniques and institutional arrangements working effectively? Are innovations in the field achieving what was intended?
CBI engages in cutting-edge research and evaluation
to answer these questions. We work in an interactive,
participant-driven, adaptive way. CBI supports practical studies to
determine what works — and what doesn’t — in the field of dispute
resolution and consensus building. We do not conduct outsider-driven,
academic studies. Instead, we engage stakeholders in multiple rounds of
goal setting, data collection, analysis, reflection and practical
problem-solving.
We utilize a range of tools, including Web-based surveys, 360-degree
assessment tools, in-depth and confidential interviews, and careful
reviews of bylaws and other governance documents. As professional mediators,
we know how to ensure confidentiality. We aim not only to compare our
findings with initially agreed-upon performance criteria, but also to
help our clients consider whether they are measuring the right things,
and how our findings can be turned their advantage. Our Board of Directors includes some of the United States’ best-known researchers in the consensus building field. We are also linked to the MIT-Harvard Public Disputes Program at Harvard Law School and the Environmental Policy Group at MIT. We bring our well-tested theory of mutual gains negotiation, as well as decades of experience in
diverse collaborative settings, to bear through rigorous analysis,
hard-hitting question-asking, and sensitivity to personalities and
politics. We help our clients understand what’s working, what’s not,
and what adjustments ought to be made.
For more information about CBI services and areas of expertise, please contact us online or call (617) 492-1414.
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