Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Analysis and Critique of Research – Based Literature
I. Summary of Hofstedeââ¬â¢s Model of Cross-Cultural Management Early management gurus used to presume that their ideas on management apply to everybody all over the world. Their notions were challenged when the Japanese became a world economic superpower, along with the significant rise of dragons and tigers economies. The notion that management principles are not universally applicable across all cultural boundaries soon emerged and began to develop itself through various cross-cultural studies, such as Lane and Beamishââ¬â¢s (1990) study on western companies that built joint-ventures with people from other nations, without considering the differences in their management cultures and thought that it would be sufficient in dealing with global competition problems. Also read thisà Critique of Stuff Is Not Salvation One study that stood out from the others came from Geert Hofstede (1980a), who defined culture as: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦the collective programming of the mind which distinguishes the members of one human group from anotherâ⬠¦the interactive aggregate of common characteristics that influences a human groupââ¬â¢s response to its environmentâ⬠. Richards (2001) mentioned that Hofstedeââ¬â¢s study was focused on the differences in ââ¬Ëmental programmingââ¬â¢ among groups of people in different nations, through their collective preferences on certain states of affairs over others. His study was conducted through a questionnaire survey on IBMââ¬â¢s employees in fifty nations and his analysis was based on comparative data from that survey. Hofstedeââ¬â¢s empirical study would then strengthen the belief that western, particularly American, management practices could not directly be applied on management from different cultures, which are based on different values. Geert Hofstede identified four levels of social attachments through which culture displays itself: symbols; heroes; rituals and values. Among said levels, values play the biggest part in explaining cultural differences. Hofstede further identified five primary value dimensions from which a pecking order can be established for each target country. These dimensions are: 1. Individualism versus Collectivism: The way in which people live together and the relationship that exists between the individual and the collectivity. 2. Large versus Small Power Distance: The extent to which a society accepts or rejects inequalities in such areas as prestige, wealth and power, or hierarchy versus equality. 3. Strong versus Weak Uncertainty Avoidance: The extent to which culture cope with uncertainty or unstructured situations, and encourage risk-taking, through technology, law and religion (risk avoidance versus risk comfort). 4. Masculinity versus Femininity: Attitudes to quality of life, achievement, assertiveness and competition (task versus relationship). 5. Long-term Orientation (Confucian work Dynamism): Value persistence (perseverance); having a sense of shame rather than guilt; search for virtue, rather than truth; long-term approach to life; and ordering relations by status and observation of it. Hofstede then placed countries within the above dimensions and found that a culture in one country makes people from that country to more likely behave in a certain way than other. This research was found to be very enlightening (Richards, 2001, p. 172), especially in paving the way to look deeper into the differences in cultural values and norms. In his 2002 counter-argument made toward McSweeneyââ¬â¢s critique, Hofstede (2002, p. 1355) even claimed that his pioneering research had resulted in a ââ¬Ëparadigm-shiftââ¬â¢ in the field of cross-cultural studies. Later on in 1987, he developed what he called as ââ¬Ëtheory Tââ¬â¢ (Richards, 2001, p. 178), which core arguments are: 1. The world is unequal and everyone has his/her place within the order. 2. Each of the children has his/her birthright place and has to work on his/her duties accordingly, but can improve his/her position through studying with a good teacher, working with a good patron, and/or marrying a good partner. 3. Wisdom is grounded on tradition. That is why human beings do not like change and will avoid it if he/she can. Trying to find the ideal model for these cultural differences, Hofstede then developed his theory T to a more complex model he called theory T +, which added on to theory T the component of change and the ability within a particular culture to modernize and synergize with other cultures through life experience; commitment to change; capacity to lead to change; and peopleââ¬â¢s learning capacities (Richards, 2001, pp. 6-17). II. Analysis and Critique The prescribed readings that followed after Richardsââ¬â¢ (2001) overview of cultural differences, cultural dimensions and syndromes, through previous academicsââ¬â¢ works (Hofstede, Trompenaars and others) and his own teachings on cultural understanding, essentially went back and forth on research credibility issues, including validity in the methodologies that these academics utilized in their research (i. e. Hofstedeââ¬â¢s critique on Trompenaarsââ¬â¢ research methodologies and its subsequent rebuttal from Hampden-Turner and Trompenaars in readings # 2 and 3 of the reading list, followed by more critique from Hofstede on Trompenaarsââ¬â¢ work in reading # 4, and still followed by Brendan McSweeney critique on Hofstedeââ¬â¢s own methodology and the quality of his evidence in reading # 5, which sparked another refutation from Hofstede in reading # 6, and still another counter-rebuttal from Sweeney in reading # 7). To this writer, all the above debate was focused on several key issues: 1. All theoretical claims have to be based on analysis grounded on empirical research. 2. Selection of methodology made on an academicââ¬â¢s research could determine the credibility of his/her research and subsequent academic analysis. 3. Research design, along with type of data and instruments to gather said data are exceptionally important in the formation of a researcherââ¬â¢s analysis. . The type of analysis used on a researcherââ¬â¢s database would determine the scope of academic claim he/she could create and how valid those claims would be. This writerââ¬â¢s own doubt on Hofstedeââ¬â¢s research is mainly based on whether his sample of 117,000 respondents who participated in his questionnaire survey are homogenous, thus representative enough to the world population that was supposed to be the target population of his research on (world) culture. Unlike McSweeney in reading # 5, however, this writer would give Hofstede the benefit of the doubt on his choice of questionnaire content, which must have played a significant part in determining whether cultural differences could be correctly reflected through the selection of question items. Simply put, should the writer be in Hofstedeââ¬â¢s shoes and possess sufficient resources within his grasp, he would probably undertake another survey-based research on a much narrower or tighter ââ¬Ëculturalââ¬â¢ sub-concept or characteristic, which makes up a larger concept of ââ¬Ëcultureââ¬â¢.
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