Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-sh8wx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-23T04:10:35.578Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Inside-Out Interviews: Cross-Cultural Research in China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2020

Martin Sposato*
Affiliation:
Zayed University, United Arab Emirates
Heather L. Jeffrey
Affiliation:
Middlesex University Dubai, United Arab Emirates
*
Corresponding author: Martin Sposato (alejandro.sposato@zu.ac.ae)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

There is a paucity of research exploring the use of local facilitators in cross-cultural research in Chinese cultural contexts and the impact this may have on data generation and knowledge creation. Addressing this gap, this paper critically reflects on cross-cultural interviews in Hong Kong. The reflection is centred on the experience of interviewing as an outsider to the culture of the participants and later working alongside an insider. While insider and outsider positionalities are formed from a multitude of intersectional characteristics, both gender and nationality emerged as primary influencers in this context. This paper contributes to the methodologically oriented literature by making salient the complexities of deciphering the multitude of influences originating from the researcher's positionality in relation to research others. Specifically, this paper highlights how both insider and outsider positionalities generate different, but complementary data through the exploration of participant's responses. ‘It's a Chinese thing’ or comments equating to it's a woman's thing were used by participants to either limit responses or expand and offer additional information, and the juxtaposition of these responses with those given to an insider help to highlight what this might mean for knowledge creation.

Type
Dialogue, Debate, and Discussion
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 The International Association for Chinese Management Research

INSIDE-OUT INTERVIEWS: CROSS-CULTURAL RESEARCH IN CHINA

Collaboration between local facilitators and outsiders when conducting research in a Chinese cultural context has been advocated by many (see for example Eckhardt, Reference Eckhardt, Piekkari and Welch2004; Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007; Tsui, Reference Tsui2004; among others), in part due to the discourse that insider researchers are better positioned than outsiders (Crang, Reference Crang2003; Dwyer & Buckle, Reference Dwyer and Buckle2009; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001; Thomas, Tienari, Davies, & Meriläinen, Reference Thomas, Tienari, Davies and Meriläinen2009). Little research has explored how intermediaries influence data collection within the context of research on/in China or elsewhere (Krzywoszynska, Reference Krzywoszynska2015). There have been notable calls for further qualitative exploratory research in Chinese cultural contexts (Barney & Zhang, Reference Barney and Zhang2009; Li, Tan, Cai, Zhu, & Wang, Reference Li, Tan, Cai, Zhu and Wang2012; Tsui, Reference Tsui2009; Wang, Reference Wang2012), and as such it is important that the academy critically reflects on the process of carrying out this type of research.

This paper contributes to the literature by offering an empirical investigation of the working with insider facilitators, and in doing so we challenge the discourse that insider researchers can generate better knowledge than outsider researchers. However, our findings also problematize the understanding of positionalities as fluid (Adu-Ampong & Adams, Reference Adu-Ampong and Adams2019; Dwyer & Buckle, Reference Dwyer and Buckle2009; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001) through an examination of persistent positioning of the outsider as socially incompetent. This is clear from the exploration of participant's responses ‘It's a Chinese thing’ or comments equating to it's a woman's thing used to either limit responses or expand and offer additional information.

This paper first discusses the concept of positionality and its application in Chinese cultural contexts, which provides the foundation for the analysis of reflections on data collected by an ‘outsider’ man and an ‘insider’ woman. Focusing on gender and nationality, this paper highlights how both insider and outsider positionalities generate different, but complementary data. Interestingly, while social class was not the focus of this paper, it emerges as an important intersection with gender and the insider researcher. Class does not appear to affect the positioning of the outsider, whose primary positioning remains socially incompetent.

POSITIONALITY

Positionality is a concept used to examine and understand a variety of social categories, such as gender, ethnicity, nationality, and class (Anthias, Reference Anthias2008). Positionality is an important, but under-analyzed concept in cross-cultural research, as it can shape the creation of knowledge by affording specific insights and understandings, but also by mediating the participants (England, Reference England1994). Such an understanding has been foundational in arguments concerning the ability of researchers to analyze people different from themselves (Anthias, Reference Anthias2008; Berger & Luckman, Reference Berger and Luckmann1989 [1966]), who may be ‘constructing a reality with one eye shut’ (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Tienari, Davies and Meriläinen2009: 319). Following this criticism, terms for describing positionality have traditionally been etic/emic, or insider/outsider.

Positionality extends wider than the researcher's understanding of self-identity, to include how they are positioned by others (Chereni, Reference Chereni2014). To some extent, all participants differ to the researcher and are therefore Other, as we are Other to them (Fawcett & Hearn, Reference Fawcett and Hearn2004). The lines between insiders and outsiders are not fixed but fluid, which demands that we rethink how beneficial insider positions are in contrast to outsiders (Adu-Ampong & Adams, Reference Adu-Ampong and Adams2019; Dwyer & Buckle, Reference Dwyer and Buckle2009; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001). Insider researchers may be able to create better rapport and trust, which might lead to more in-depth data; for instance, a woman might feel more comfortable talking about the challenges of being a mother to another mother. Shared positionalities between researcher and participants can be an advantage, but difference may also create a lens which sees past that which is normalized (Alvesson & Skoldberg, Reference Alvesson and Sköldberg2009).

Conversely, Whitehead (Reference Whitehead2002) argues that many men are gender-blind, as men may see themselves as the norm, which limits their ability to understand, observe or be aware of issues not directly relevant to them. This blindness may not occur consciously, but rather subconsciously linked to the man's positionality. The worldview shaped by researcher and participant positionalities may also influence how the data is generated and analyzed (Berger, Reference Berger2015). For example, the meaning of trust or justice varies dramatically from Chinese to Western cultural contexts (Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007). If the researcher is not aware of these nuances, the participants and researcher could be speaking two different languages.

Positioning, Nationality, and Cross-Cultural Research in China

Several authors have noted the difficulties that non-Chinese researchers face when researching in Chinese cultural contexts (Roy, Walters, & Luk, Reference Roy, Walters and Luk2001; Zhou & Nunes, Reference Zhou and Baptista Nunes2013). Stening and Zhang (Reference Stening and Zhang2007) highlight the importance of certain aspects of the researcher's positionality, suggesting this may affect the attitudes and answers of the participants. Participants may be more or less willing to open up and share their views depending on the specific context of the interview, the person who is conducting the interview and topics discussed. Furthermore, depending on the positionality of the researcher, participants might be reluctant to openly express negative opinions (Sanchez-Burks et al., Reference Sanchez-Burks, Lee, Choi, Nisbett, Zhao and Koo2003).

Roy et al. (Reference Roy, Walters and Luk2001) have addressed some of the challenges that non-local researchers might face and suggest that the use of a Chinese interviewer/ facilitator could help to overcome these. Working alongside local facilitators to conduct interviews may improve the trustworthiness of the collected data (Eckhardt, Reference Eckhardt, Piekkari and Welch2004), and add perspective, which can help triangulation at the time of conceptualizing the data (Watkins-Mathys, Reference Watkins-Mathys2006). Tsui (Reference Tsui2009) has argued that the collaboration between insider and outsider researchers leads to ‘in-outsiders’ cooperation, which might provide diverse research perspectives. Finally, the facilitator also reduces the likelihood of errors due to cultural misunderstandings (Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007).

Inside-Out Interviews

The importance of a reflexive approach to research in Chinese cultural contexts should not be underestimated (Wang, Reference Wang2012). As reflexivity is primarily based on questioning the relationships between ourselves and the research participants (Haynes, Reference Haynes, Symon and Cassell2012), I reflect on the collected data. Reflection helps to illustrate how researchers affect the data collection process, and how different positionalities (insider and outsider) can help to enrich the data and create knowledge. In this specific case, the reflections are based on the 15 semi-structured interviews with Chinese women middle managers conducted as part of the first author's doctoral studies.

During the process of conducting these interviews, I faced what Cassell and Symon (Reference Cassell and Symon2004) have catalogued as ‘difficult interviews’, and as such enlisted a local facilitator (Roy et al., Reference Roy, Walters and Luk2001). The decision to work with a local facilitator was based on previous studies, which have concluded that a diverse research team has the potential to produce better outcomes (Jonsen et al., Reference Jonsen, Butler, Mäkelä, Piekkari, Drogendijk, Lauring, Lervik, Pahlberg, Vodosek and Zander2013).The interviews were therefore repeated on two separate occasions, originally with myself, a Caucasian but not white man, (then) London based, Western educated, Argentinian researcher of Italian heritage. Then later with a Hong Kong ethnically Chinese, university educated woman research assistant.

REFLECTIONS OF AN OUTSIDER

When reflecting on the data collected, both nationality and the gender of the researchers appear to have elicited very different responses from the participants. The Outsider was positioned by the participants as such, and the expression ‘it's a Chinese thing’ was repeated time and again to highlight this. Gender also shaped the participants’ responses, especially when discussing more intimate issues. The section entitled it's a woman's thing explores this alongside the potential gender blindness of the author.

It's a Chinese Thing

The outsider researcher questions were often answered with the phrase, ‘It is a Chinese thing’ as a way to state; ‘You are an outsider, you cannot possibly really understand this issue, and I do not know how or I do not want to explain it to you’. I think this both highlights how the participant positioned me as Other (Anthias, Reference Anthias2008; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001) and how this process of Othering ultimately limited the response. A further instance of the limiting effect of Othering is evidenced when one manager was asked by the outsider researcher: ‘Do you involve yourself in your subordinates' personal lives’? To which she replied: ‘Yes, me and all the managers get involved in the private life of the subordinates, but you know, it is normal; it is a Chinese thing’. But when further asked, why? The answer was repeated, ‘It's a Chinese thing’. This expression both summarises and essentializes Chinese society, limiting the discussion of alternatives and singularities.

Throughout the interviews, it is not clear why participants chose to contextualize and explain some of their answers in more depth and limit their answers in other instances. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the facilitator, never received the response ‘It's a Chinese thing’, or similar comments. For example, the same participant offered the following response to the same question when asked by the facilitator:

‘yes, we all get involved in the personal lives of our subordinates, but you know how it is some people just pay lip service to the personal lives of their subordinates, but some others develop very close links, like (name and name) who treats her assistance as a young sister’.

However, there were cases where the outsider's positionality may have positively influenced the data collection, facilitating more detailed explanations. This occurred when participants presumed that the outsider knew nothing about their culture. This assumption is evidenced by phrases such as ‘Let me explain to you because you are not Chinese’, or ‘any Chinese person would know that, but I will explain’, and consequently, a more contextualized explanation that enriched the research process emerged. Here rather than difference creating a lens to see past that which is normalized in Chinese culture (Alvesson & Skoldberg, Reference Alvesson and Sköldberg2009), being positioned as Other enabled or encouraged participants to fully explain the things that they believed the researcher did not know. This supports other findings, where arguably insiders Adu-Ampong and Adams (Reference Adu-Ampong and Adams2019) highlighted that being positioned as socially incompetent, facilitated deeper explanations. Outsiders can perform the role of socially incompetent with obvious ease.

One manager was asked: ‘why are there so many relatives of the owner of the company working in the organization’? She answered:

‘any Chinese person would know that, but I will explain to you, Chinese people care for their (extended) family, and a way to do this is by giving them with jobs, it doesn't matter that they might not be the best at what they do, but as part of the extended family (of the owner) he provides them with jobs when possible, secures their loyalty of the people working here, this is more important than how well they do their job’.

When the same manager was asked the same question a year later by the local facilitator, the participant commented: ‘you know how this is, we all have to care for each other’. A clear example of how participants adapt their answers based on perceived positionalities. As the long explanation shows, participants seemed unaware of the possibility that the foreign researcher may have studied the characteristics of the Chinese culture and underestimated my knowledge. The extended answer exhibits the need of the manager to explain the concept of loyalty, loyalty being central to organizations in Chinese contexts (Farh & Cheng, Reference Farh, Cheng, Li, Tsui and Weldon2000).

A long, contextualized answer, given to an outsider opens the door to follow-up questions, whereas the second answer omits loyalty, assuming that the insider already knows how important it is to have relatives working in the organization. Interestingly, even though insider knowledge is taken for granted in the second response, follow-up questions helped to understand how sometimes line managers are bypassed as some subordinates have a ‘direct line’ to the owner of the organization. This more detailed explanation of work politics given to the insider researcher could be the consequence of better rapport created by two people with a similar culture. It could also be that as the base of knowledge was presumed to be similar, participants felt they had more time to explain something slightly more complicated, such as office politics.

Other differences between the answers given to the insider and the outsider can be identified based on the use of language. Even though all participants were fluent in English, the inclusion of Cantonese words was far more prominent in the interviews that took place with the local insider. Participants rarely used words in Cantonese when interviewed by the outsider researcher, and when they did, they always apologized for it. Whereas when the insider conducted her interviews, words in Cantonese were more prominent and unapologetically used. The addition of a few words in Cantonese did not affect the actual outcomes of the interviews. However, it does highlight how an insider researcher who speaks the same language might create an open environment (Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007), allowing participants to fall back on their local language when needed, without the need to apologize.

It's a Woman's Thing

Questions that focussed on women's experiences of leadership were answered in more detail when asked by the local woman facilitator, which supports the gender studies literature that women might be better than men at creating rapport with women (Oakley, Reference Oakley and Roberts1981). When asked by the female facilitator ‘How much support do you have from your husband in your professional role’? A manager commented: ‘[I feel] a lack of support from my husband for the upbringing our children and domestic chores in general’. She described her husband as:

‘Extremely focused on his career […] but I also think that is an excuse, with little time and unwillingness to help with the domestic chores, my son or old relatives; this is my job, not his’.

This notion was echoed by several of the other participants. In contrast, when asked by the male researcher, the same manager replied, ‘Not much’. These answers evidence a clear distinction in the amount of information concerning their relationships; participants were willing to disclose. In addition to this, I did not ask follow up questions to this response, which could be the consequence of ‘gender blindness’ (Whitehead, Reference Whitehead2002), where perhaps the importance of the question and the answer was not fully understood. On the other hand, the participants may have also Othered me (Chereni, Reference Chereni2014; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001) as just another man, who is either not interested or would not understand.

While ‘gender blindness’, and my gendered positionality may have led to ‘difficult interviews’ (Cassell & Symon, Reference Cassell and Symon2004), the insider's positionality was far from unproblematic. The insider was from the upper class, evident from her dispositions resulting from her economic, cultural, and social capital (Bourdieu, Reference Bourdieu1990). Class intersecting with gender (Anthias, Reference Anthias2008), colored the interviews with many of the participants coming from working-class aspirational backgrounds. An example of this intersection occurred when the local facilitator asked a manager why she did not have a foreign domestic helper (a common practice in Hong Kong). The local manager answered quite curtly: ‘not everyone has a big home to host a maid, some people live in very small homes’, making an implicit reference to the difference in the sizes of their homes. This is a clear symbol of status in Hong Kong, a city where affordable housing is a serious problem. When the outsider asked a similar question, that ‘the problem is not to pay for their [domestic workers] salary, the problem is where to put them’ (as foreign domestic workers are required by law to live in the home where they work). The answer to the questions is quite similar – the problems of housing a foreign maid – yet the interaction, and tone of the answers are different.

I could also be considered from a middle class, but perhaps my ambiguous identity (from the participants’ perspective) – Western-educated, Caucasian but not white, led to my being understood as simply a socially incompetent outsider. We would argue that in this instance social class does not travel across culture, for example the marker for social class here – domestic help, would not be a marker for social class in other contexts. Overall, both the insider and outsider positionalities helped to enrich the data by bridging limitations that might be assigned to either positionality, such as gender-blindness, or an inability to see past what is normalised in Chinese culture and in gender.

CONCLUSION

Overall, this paper contributes to the literature by offering an empirical investigation of working with local facilitators in research in Chinese cultural contexts (Eckhardt, Reference Eckhardt, Piekkari and Welch2004; Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007; Tsui, Reference Tsui2004). We challenge the discourse that situates local and foreign researchers as insider/outsider with the former being more desirable for data generation (Crang, Reference Crang2003; Dwyer & Buckle, Reference Dwyer and Buckle2009; Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001; Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Tienari, Davies and Meriläinen2009). The assumption that the outsider researcher knew nothing about their culture and way of life, often leading to phrases such as ‘Let me explain to you because you are not Chinese’, or ‘any Chinese person would know that, but I will explain’, is starkly juxtaposed with ‘It's a Chinese thing’. Here the outsider positionality can be said to both limit and enrich the data. While, positionality has been described as fluid (Merriam et al., Reference Merriam, Johnson-Bailey, Lee, Kee, Ntseane and Muhamad2001), in this particular case, the social positioning of the outsider was quite static.

The outsider was positioned as socially incompetent when discussing issues related to culture or issues related to gender. As previously noted, being positioned as socially incompetent appeared to both enrich and limit data. The insider researcher certainly yielded complimentary data, obtaining more detail when I had struggled. This could be due to her ability to build better rapport, but also due to shared basic understandings, which led the participants to think that they could focus on more complex issues such as office politics. The closer shorter distance between the insider and the participants led to certain class politics, as her class could be perceived and understood. However, we note that the outsider remained outside Hong Kong class structures, and as such argue that class perhaps does not travel across cultures in this instance. This is perhaps partly because the researcher is not white, and as such, is not understood to have white privilege.

The reflections presented in the paper support the arguments for working with local facilitators when carrying out cross-cultural research in Chinese cultural contexts (Eckhardt, Reference Eckhardt, Piekkari and Welch2004; Stening & Zhang, Reference Stening and Zhang2007; Tsui, Reference Tsui2004). Finally, even though nationality and gender were two of the most salient factors that affected the data collection, they are only part of the positionality of each of the researchers. As the reflection on class exemplifies, positionality is intersectional (Anthias, Reference Anthias2008) and further research should account for this depending on the research context. We have briefly highlighted that class is linked to race, but also how class may not travel across cultures, which we feel should be explored further.

References

REFERENCES

Adu-Ampong, E. A., & Adams, E. A. 2019. ‘But you are also Ghanaian, you should know’: Negotiating the insider–outsider research positionality in the fieldwork encounter. Qualitative Inquiry. DOI: 1077800419846532.Google Scholar
Alvesson, M., & Sköldberg, K. 2009. Reflexive methodology: New vistas for qualitative research. London, UK: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Anthias, F. 2008. Thinking through the lens of translocational positionality: An intersectionality frame for understanding identity and belonging. Translocations: Migration and Social Change, 4(1): 520.Google Scholar
Barney, J. B., & Zhang, S. 2009. The future of Chinese management research: A theory of Chinese management versus a Chinese theory of management. Management and Organization Review, 5(1): 1528.Google Scholar
Berger, P. L. & Luckmann, T. 1989 [1966]. The social construction of reality: A treatise in the sociology of knowledge. New York, NY: Anchor Books.Google Scholar
Berger, R. 2015. Now I see it, now I don't: Researcher's position and reflexivity in qualitative research. Qualitative Research, 15(2): 219234.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1990. The logic of practice. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Cassell, C., & Symon, G. 2004. Essential guide to qualitative methods in organizational research. London, UK: Sage Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chereni, A. 2014. Positionality and collaboration during fieldwork: Insights from research with co-nationals living abroad. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 15(3).Google Scholar
Crang, M. 2003. Qualitative methods: Touchy, feely, look-see? Progress in Human Geography, 27(4): 494504.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dwyer, S. C., & Buckle, J. L. 2009. The space between: On being an insider-outsider in qualitative research. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 8(1): 5463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eckhardt, G. M. 2004. The role of culture in conducting trustworthy and credible qualitative business research in China. In Piekkari, R. & Welch, C. (Eds.), Handbook of qualitative research methods for international business: 402420. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Cheltenham.Google Scholar
England, K. V. 1994. Getting personal: Reflexivity, positionality, and feminist research. The Professional Geographer, 46(1): 8089.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farh, J., & Cheng, B. 2000. A cultural analysis of paternalistic leadership in Chinese organizations. In Li, J., Tsui, A., & Weldon, E. (Eds.), Management and organizations in the Chinese context: 84127. Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillian.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fawcett, B., & Hearn, J. 2004. Researching others: Epistemology, experience, standpoints and participation. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 7(3): 201218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haynes, K. 2012. Reflexivity in qualitative research. In Symon, G. & Cassell, C. (Eds.), Qualitative organizational research: Core methods and current challenges: 7289. London, UK: Sage Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jonsen, K., Butler, C. L., Mäkelä, K., Piekkari, R., Drogendijk, R., Lauring, J., Lervik, J. E., Pahlberg, C., Vodosek, M., & Zander, L. 2013. Processes of international collaboration in management research: A reflexive, autoethnographic approach. Journal of Management Inquiry, 22(4): 394413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krzywoszynska, A. 2015. On being a foreign body in the field, or how reflexivity around translation can take us beyond language. Area, 47(3): 311318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, J., Tan, Y., Cai, Z., Zhu, H., & Wang, X. 2012. Regional differences in a national culture and their effects on leadership effectiveness: A tale of two neighboring Chinese cities. Journal of World Business, 48(1): 1319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merriam, S. B., Johnson-Bailey, J., Lee, M. Y., Kee, Y., Ntseane, G., & Muhamad, M. 2001. Power and positionality: Negotiating insider/outsider status within and across cultures. International Journal of Lifelong Education, 20(5): 405416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oakley, A. 1981. Interviewing women: A contradiction in terms. In Roberts, H. (Ed.), Doing feminist research: 3061. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Roy, A., Walters, P. G., & Luk, S. T. 2001. Chinese puzzles and paradoxes: Conducting business research in China. Journal of Business Research, 52(2): 203210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanchez-Burks, J., Lee, F., Choi, I., Nisbett, R., Zhao, S., & Koo, J. 2003. Conversing across cultures: East–West communication styles in work and non-work contexts. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(2): 363–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stening, B. W., & Zhang, M. Y. 2007. Methodological challenges confronted when conducting management research in China. International Journal of Cross Cultural Management, 7(1): 121142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, R., Tienari, J., Davies, A., & Meriläinen, S. 2009. Let's talk about ‘us’: A reflexive account of a cross-cultural research collaboration. Journal of Management Inquiry, 18(4): 313324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsui, A. S. 2004. Contributing to global management knowledge: A case for high quality indigenous research. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 21(4): 491513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsui, A. S. 2009. Editor's introduction–Autonomy of inquiry: Shaping the future of emerging scientific communities. Management and Organization Review, 5(1): 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, G. G. 2012. Indigenous Chinese HRM research: Phenomena, methods, and challenges. Journal of Chinese Human Resources Management, 3(2): 8899.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins-Mathys, L. 2006. Focus group interviewing in China: Language, culture, and sensemaking. Journal of International Entrepreneurship, 4(4): 209226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehead, S. M. 2002. Men and masculinities: Key themes and new directions. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Zhou, L., & Baptista Nunes, M. 2013. Doing qualitative research in Chinese contexts: Lessons learned from conducting interviews in a Chinese healthcare environment. Library Hi Tech, 31(3): 419434.CrossRefGoogle Scholar