Introduction to cross-cultural mediation In this article, we will explain a cross-cultural dispute scenario where mediators need to apply appropriate skills to resolve conflicts. In order to resolve these types of conflicts, intermediaries adopt a fair approach to conflict, as mediators must recognize and identify cultural differences in order to properly resolve conflicts It must be. The mediator must promote communication and begin trust in controversy in order to successfully solve intercultural conflicts.
Intercultural and intercultural mediation of Dominique Busch in Western countries is the subject of research and has gained increasing attention over the past 30 years. The growing concern may arise from the concept of society that all forms of cultural involvement can create problems to be addressed in a positive way. In other words, most people in Western society seem to agree with tools or tools that people can apply when thinking that problems caused by cultural contact should be solved.
In this article we will try to reveal the various structures of cultural basic research in intercultural mediation. The general assumptions of arbitration techniques and existing cultural differences are considerable attention, but different cultural concepts are often not noticed. As recently the authors used in linguistic studies of intercultural communication, different cultural concepts will lead to different evaluations of people's actual behavior and their potential action choices. In other words, we can expect people to act as a form of intercultural execution behavior. It will be decided considerably by the theoretical understanding of the role of culture itself (Busch, 2009).