Interpersonal Confilt and Its Management In Information
System Development
Henri Barki and Jon Hartwick
Volume 25, Issue 2
Abstract
Researchers from a wide range of management areas agree that conflicts
are an important part of organizational life and that their study is important.
Yet, interpersonal conflict is a neglected topic in information system
development (ISD). Based on definitional properties of interpersonal conflict
identified in the management and organizational behavior literatures, this
paper tests a model of how individuals participating in ISD projects perceive
interpersonal conflict and examines the relationships between interpersonal
conflict, management of the conflict, and ISD outcomes. Questionnaire data
was obtained from 265 IS staff and 272 users working on 162 ISD projects.
Results indicated that the construct of interpersonal conflict was reflected
by three key dimensions: disagreement, interference, and negative emotion.
While conflict management was found to have positive effects on ISD outcomes,
it did not substantially mitigate the negative effects of interpersonal
conflict on these outcomes. In other words, the impact of interpersonal
conflict was perceived to be negative, regardless of how it was managed
or resolved.
Keywords:
IS project management, IS project teams, user/analyst interaction, conflict
resolution
ISRL Categories:
EE, EE02, FD08, AA10