Not a Wikimedia project (though we do use MediaWiki) but at wikiHow we get by pretty well without conflict resolution documentation. We have a mediation team that rarely (well, never) gets used. We've handled conflicts on a case-by-case basis. When I have an issue between two members escalated to me, my first way of dealing with it is to order a "cease fire"--no direct communication between the two parties involved, ever again. This solves 99% of problems.
That being said - it works pretty well for our community, its culture, and the kinds of conflicts that come up here. I'm a fan of minimal documentation to avoid a culture of wikiLawyering. I know our example might be unique and not applicable, I just wanted to offer a different perspective. Not having documentation puts conflict resolution in the hands of the staff and that requires a high degree of trust, which I think is a healthy metric for the staff-community relationship in general.
If you care to provide examples of conflicts that have arisen so far, that might help guide suggestions for documentation, or handling.
Hope this helps :)