Cross-cultural management in work organisations (Record no. 6945)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 05272nam a2200157Ia 4500
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 817371617X
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 658
Item number FRE
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name French, Ray
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Cross-cultural management in work organisations
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Hyderabad
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Universities Press (India) Ltd.
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2008
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent x,213p.
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Contents Acknowledgements and credits ix List of figures and tables x PART 1: SETTING THE SCENE Chapter 1 Introduction 3 Objectives 3 Cross-cultural management - an everyday activity? 3 A multi-layered subject area 4 An emerging area 4 Non-cultural explanations 6 The centrality of ethics 7 A changing world 8 The organisation of this book 9 PART 2: CULTURE - USES AND LIMITATIONS 13 Chapter 2 The meaning(s) of culture 15 Objectives 15 Introduction 15 Defining culture 16 Levels of analysis 18 Dealing with the ecological fallacy 23 Culture change 24 Convergence and divergence 25 Interpreting culture profiles 27 Is national culture still meaningful? 27 Organisational culture 27 National and organisational culture - similarities 28 Linking the macro and micro levels 30 Non-cultural explanations 30 Chapter 3 Understanding models of culture 33 Objectives 33 Introduction 33 A twenty-first-century view 34 Geert Hofstede's pivotal contribution 37 The Chinese Value Survey and the fifth dimension 39 Utilising Hofstede's model of culture 40 Criticisms of Hofstede's work 41 At the core of cross-cultural studies: Kluckhohn and Strodtbeck's work 42 Fons Trompenaars' 7-D model: practical steps for doing business 43 Evaluating Trompenaars' work 46 Shalom Schwartz' universal values model 47 A potentially valuable departure 49 Cultural differences in communication style 50 Non-cultural explanations 52 Chapter 4 Conceptualising culture - the way forward 55 Objectives 55 Introduction 55 Evaluating bipolar value-based models of culture 56 An example of the emic approach - guanxi 57 A time for new research methods? 59 Senior managers as the object of study? 60 Some emerging theoretical approaches 61 Convergence, divergence, globalisation and cross-cultural management 62 A new domestic stage for cross-cultural management? 64 PART 3: CROSS-CULTURAL SOCIAL RELATIONS IN THE WORKPLACE 67 Chapter 5 Culture and organisation structure 69 Objectives 69 Introduction 69 Classical models of structure 70 The Chinese small business model 72 Alternatives to bureaucracy - adapting to 'contingencies'73 Contingent factors 75 Culture and the contingency approach 77 The institutional level 78 Do cultural values underlie organisation structure? 78 Contemporary and emerging structures 81 Culture and structure - a complex area 83 Chapter 6 Intercultural communication 87 Objectives 87 Introduction 87 The need for awareness 87 Stereotyping revisited 88 Other barriers to intercultural communication 90 Mixed messages and non-verbal communication 91 Enhancing intercultural communication 93 Cross-cultural theory and communication 95 The crucial contribution of Hall's low- and high-context model96 Chinese culture 97 Levels of communication 99 Chapter 7 Leadership 105 Objectives 105 Introduction 105 The traits approach 106 The behavioural approach 108 Implicit leadership theories 110 The contingency approach 112 Project GLOBE 113 Evaluation of Project GLOBE 119 The institutional level 119 Emerging twenty-first century approaches to leadership 120 Chapter 8 Motivation and exchange 123 Objectives 123 Introduction 123 Universal needs? 124 Self-actualisers? 124 Is the content approach to motivation culture-bound? 126 Positive psychology 126 Job characteristics: a universal link to motivation? 127 Needs and job characteristics models in different cultures - some evidence 129 How are people motivated? Orientations to work across cultures 132 Other 'process' models of motivation 135 Conclusion 137 Globalised motivational strategies138 PART 4: MANAGING ACROSS OR WITHIN CULTURES 141 Chapter 9 Intercultural competencies, training and ethics 143 Objectives 143 Introduction 143 Overcoming culture shock - the core intercultural competency? 143 The search for effective interventions 145 Intercultural competencies at home 147 Is cultural awareness sufficient? 149 Cross-cultural training - other considerations 151 The effectiveness of cross-cultural training 152 The ethical dimension 152 Ethics and the cross-cultural manager 154 Gender issues and ethics 156 Dealing with ethical dilemmas 157 Non-negotiable moral issues 158 Chapter 10 Culture and human resource management 161 Objectives 161 Introduction 161 International HRM in context 161 Varieties of capitalism 164 Culture and human resource management 166 Culture and the functional areas of HRM 167 The effect of culture - a mixed picture? 174 PART 5: LOOKING TO THE FUTURE 177 Chapter 11 Conclusions 179 Objectives 179 Comparing cultures - enduring evidence 179 Cultural values - some further considerations 181 Should cultures be compared? 184 Cross-cultural management in 'new' forms of organisation 184 Diversity and synergy - the future of cross-cultural management 187 Non-managerial approaches 188 Universalism or relativism? 189 Continuous change 189 References 190 Index 205
890 ## - COUNTRY
-- India
891 ## - TOPIC
-- MTM
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        Faculty of Architecture CEPT Library CEPT Library 10/02/2009 Ashok Prakashan Mandir 290.00 658 FRE 004284 30/08/2013 30/08/2013 Book Status:Catalogued;Bill No:SAL/156
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