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Cases and Projects in International Management (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,279
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Cases and Projects in International Management (Hardcover)
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Culture may not be the only factor to affect organizational
structure. Size, strategic location, the industrial climate, the
complexity of the task in hand and the kind of technology used all
exert an influence and profoundly affect the relations between
members of an organization. Managers therefore have to contend with
weighing culture against other variables when trying to implement
organizational structure.If culture is but one among a range of
factors, then why are cross-cultural management skills so
important? Mead crisply answers this question at the outset and his
views may be summarized as follows. Today's business world is
global and therefore firms are forced to establish branches and
subsidiaries outside their national boundaries. Managers have to
deal with people from other cultures, and it is imperative that
they develop the ability to interact with individuals who have
different cultural priorities. Effective cross-cultural management
increasingly means working with people from different cultures and
learning to tolerate differences when devising shared priorities.In
today's economic climate, market forces appear to have an
increasingly anthropological dimension. The ethnocentric manager,
for example, who is unable or unwilling to deal with members of
other cultures has fewer career opportunities. To accommodate these
changes management schools are giving increasing priority to
teaching cross-cultural management skills. International Management
combines theory and practice, and includes a variety of exercises
to enable students to apply general concepts to specific
situations.Mead acknowledges the difficulty in providing a single
definition of culture, but does not duckthe issue. Instead he
provides a succinct account of the sociological and anthropological
positions before moving on to the management literature. This
publication deserves a warm welcome because it acknowledges the
contribution made by anthropologists to the understanding of
culture. As Richard Mead demonstrates, there is clearly a great
deal of scope for making more use of anthropological insights in
clarifying the role of culture in international management. The
book is aimed at students and has been written with admirable
clarity, and should be of value to anyone involved in teaching
applied social sciences.
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