
Drawing On Thirty Years Of Empirical Research, This Book Reveals The Diversity Of Managerial Practices That May Be Observed Throughout The World, Even In Places Where Companies Are Using Management Methods That Appear Identical. Using Data From Over Fifty Countries, It Presents A New Theoretical Approach To Cultural Diversity Whereby Culture Is Considered A Filter Through Which People Understand Reality And Give It Meaning. This Interpretative Perspective Reminds Us That Interactions Within Organizational Contexts Are Primarily Social, And Thus Conceived Differently From One Culture To Another. This Is Fundamental To Our Understanding Of The Challenges Of Globalization And The Powerful Forces That Foster The International Homogenization Of Management Practices. Leadership, Decision-making, Customer Relations, Ethics And Corporate Social Responsibility, And Interpersonal And Corporate Communication Are Just Some Aspects Of Management Underpinned And Influenced By Cultural Variation. In Response To This Intellectual And Practical Challenge This Book Provides Methodological Guidelines To Enable Researchers And Practitioners To Engage In An Alternative Approach To Cross-cultural Management.
This book investigates how cultural frameworks act as filters that fundamentally shape managerial practices and organizational interactions across diverse global contexts. The authors, a team of researchers led by Philippe d'Iribarne, draw upon thirty years of empirical research to challenge the assumption that identical management methods yield uniform results. They argue that because organizational interactions are inherently social, they are interpreted through distinct cultural lenses, necessitating a shift in how globalization and management homogenization are understood.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the field of international management for its departure from traditional, standardized models. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is best suited for researchers and practitioners seeking a nuanced, sociologically-informed approach to global business.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192599402
ISBN-13:
9780192599407
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