Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I CULTURAL FOUNDATIONS
- 1 The culture theory jungle: divergence and convergence in models of national culture
- 2 Culture, organizations, and institutions: an integrative review
- 3 When does culture matter?
- PART II CULTURE AND ORGANIZATION THEORY
- PART III CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
- PART IV FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN THEORY AND RESEARCH
- Index
2 - Culture, organizations, and institutions: an integrative review
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I CULTURAL FOUNDATIONS
- 1 The culture theory jungle: divergence and convergence in models of national culture
- 2 Culture, organizations, and institutions: an integrative review
- 3 When does culture matter?
- PART II CULTURE AND ORGANIZATION THEORY
- PART III CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
- PART IV FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN THEORY AND RESEARCH
- Index
Summary
The focus on national culture as a major variable in global management research has been primarily guided and inspired by the now classic work of Hofstede (1980), although there is already a vibrant literature on culture and organizational behavior prior to the popularity of cultural dimensions (for a review, see Bhagat and McQuaid, 1982). Hofstede identified four major dimensions of culture in his framework: individualism-collectivism; power distance; uncertainty avoidance; and masculinity-femininity. Numerous studies have employed his framework to examine diverse organizational issues (for a review, see Kirkman, Lowe, and gibson, 2006), ranging from the choice of entry mode (e.g., Kogut and Singh, 1988), cultural differences in the popularity of internet shopping (Lim, Leung, Sia, and Lee, 2004), the popularity of employee assistance programs (Bhagat, Steverson, and Segovis, 2007), intercultural negotiation (Brett and Okumura, 1998) to foreign-local employee relationships (Ang, van dyne, and Begley, 2003).
While Hofstede's framework is obviously important and influential, there are constant pleas for the development of novel constructs to advance our understanding of culture and international business (e.g., Leung, Bhagat, Buchan, Erez, and gibson, 2005). The objective of our chapter is to review the development of cultural frameworks in the arena of global management since Hofstede's (1980) monumental work, explore how the cultural perspective can augment the institutional perspective, a popular approach for understanding firm differences across cultures, and identify fruitful directions for future research on culture and global management.
Research on cultural dimensions
Major dimensions of culture
Perhaps because Hofstede's (1980) work is based on work values, the bulk of research on culture in the last two decades is concerned with shared values of members of different societies.
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- Cambridge Handbook of Culture, Organizations, and Work , pp. 23 - 45Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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