Cross-cultural management is a crucial challenge for the successful development of international business, yet it is often badly understood and poorly implemented. Misunderstandings arise as culture affects both individuals and organizations, yet attempts to understand, explain and interpret these differences have often been hidden between a welter of conflicting theories and paradigms.
This book is a much-needed guide to the theory and practice of cross-cultural management. It focuses on four key areas:
- the language connection
- the global connection
- the management connection
- the multimedia connection.
Using an innovative approach combining theory, tool-kits and applications, it takes a fresh look at this complex topic, investigating the recognition of cross-cultural differences, accounting for them in managerial communications, and bridging them in a variety of negotiations, interactions and collaborative projects.
Introduction Or The Shadow Of The Tower Of Babel Chapter1: The Ends, Means And Meanings Of Cultures Or The Language ConnectionEnds of Cultural Software Means: Objective knowledge? Meanings: Learning cultural codes as languages Ends, Means And Meanings Of Culture; The language connection Professional Bureaucracy In Action: The case of the BBC Chapter 2: Clashing Civilizations or the Global ConnectionCross Cultural Aspects of Globalization Two Cassandras of Globalization: Huntington and Ritzer Cross-Cultural Compromises and Multiculturalism Shifting Cultural Identities: The global connection The Case of Integrating Kazakh Immigrants in Poland Chapter 3: Networking Organizations or the Management Connection &nl£!