Sub-theme 31: Leveraging Cultural Dynamics in Organizations
Call for Papers
Cultural diversity is the rule in many organizations and no longer the exception. A variety of organizational situations
is concerned with cultural diversity: teams of migrant workers, cooperation at distance, virtual international teams, expatriates
managing a local workforce, transferring management practices across countries, off-shore sub-contracting, etc. Professional
life has become immeasurably more complicated by the encounter with the unfamiliar and dissimilar worldviews, values and practices.
The spreading of cultural diversity in organizations has many implications:
- Settling agreements to achieve managerial goals and interacting effectively between people having different worldviews
- Building or capitalizing on common ground to ease interactions
- Developing a climate of trust in which everyone feels acknowledged
- Managing tensions resulting from diverging views
- Drawing upon these different views in a constructive manner
- Choosing appropriate work language(s)
- Enhancing not a common, but a widely accepted hybrid organizational culture
While at the personal level culturally complex encounters can be challenging and painful due
to the differences in values, norms, identities and meaning embodied in actors from different cultural backgrounds, they can
also be enriching, and contribute to professional and personal development. Similarly, at the organizational level, whereas
the intercultural interface can lead to 'frictional loss', the view is emerging that cultural diversity can be leveraged to
achieve creativity and synergy (Adler, 2008; Stahl et al., 2010).
The cultural composition alone does not determine
the outcome of cross-cultural work because the protagonists are embedded in organizational contexts, which play a major role
in shaping the dynamics. Reciprocally, the understanding of the organizational dynamics cannot dispose of the different cultural
worldviews through which actors give meaning to social situations (d'Iribarne, 2009). Cultural references and organizational
contexts have to be articulated to understand what is going on when working across cultures.
This sub-theme aims
to investigate dynamic intercultural interactions in organizations. We invite scholars to deepen our knowledge on the articulation
of cultures and organizational contexts and to address the following questions:
- How to unravel the complexity of cross-cultural situations (including the interplay of multiple cultures related to professional, organizational, regional, national communities) and the influence of these cultures on power relations, marginalization and identities?
- How do organizations manage to make the most of cultural differences? How is common hybrid ground built?
- How can managers overcome cultural differences and conflicts and turn them into creative, synergistic solutions?
- How can divergent resourceful competencies be combined?
- What are the processes of conflict resolution in cross-cultural organizations?
- What are the consequences of the choice of multiple languages or a lingua franca?
The sub-theme builds on and extends the discussion on intercultural management with new analyses, and a focus on a contextualized
approach to the relationship between culture, organization and management. It is concerned with situations in which cultural
differences are not merely to be overcome but can be leveraged to create a new culture, or interculture which can be considered
as a resource for the organization.
Contributions employing multidisciplinary approaches and relying on insights
from multiple cultural backgrounds (Primecz et al., 2011) are encouraged. Qualitative research and case studies (Piekkari
& Welch, 2011) are welcome, as well as conceptual contributions.
References
Adler, Nancy J. (2008): International Dimensions of Organizational Behavior, Fifth Edition. Mason, OH: Thomson Learning.
D'Iribarne, Philippe (2009): 'National cultures and organizations in search of a theory: an interpretative approach.' International Journal of Cross-Cultural Management, 9 (3), 309–321.
Piekkari, Rebecca & Catherine Welch (2011): Rethinking the Case Study in International Business and Management Research. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.
Primecz, Henriette, Laurence Romani & Sonja Sackmann (2011): Cross-Cultural Management in Practice: Culture and Negotiated Meanings. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.
Stahl, Günter, Kristiina Mäleka, Lena Zander & Martha L. Maznevski (2010): 'A look at the bright side of multicultural team diversity.' Scandinavian Journal of Management, 26, 439–447.