This volume in the Routledge Global Human Resource Management
Series is dedicated to analyzing the process of trust development
between managers and subordinates in different countries of the
main cultures of the world. Behaviors and trust are linked in a
process that can reinforce or diminish the trust between the two
parties. This book examines that process in an array of countries,
contextualizing each setting through a brief historical,
institutional, and cultural overview. Addressing the dominant HR
practices and the main local leadership styles of each country, it
draws upon an extensive country-by-country data set of
leader-subordinate trust to analyze the universal and
culturally-specific elements of this process. With its rigorous
research, insightful analysis, and consistent presentation, this
book will help readers to systematically compare the process across
countries to draw conclusions and analyze HR implications.
This book is intended as a text for graduate courses in Cross
Cultural Business, International Human Resource Management and
Cross Cultural Organisational Psychology. In addition to a student
market, the text will also be of interest to the reflective
practitioner operating in different cultural settings who requires
a contextual knowledge of key aspects of workplace relations,
management style and host country situation.
General
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