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Moon and Peter Woolliams Reviewed work(s): Source: Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 27, No. 1/2, Business Challenging Business Ethics: New Instruments for Coping with Diversity in International Business: The 12th Annual EBEN Conference (Sep., 2000), pp. 105-115 Published by: Springer Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25074367 . Accessed: 28/08/2012 12:05
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Chris J. Moon
Peter Woolliams
The
Trompenaars
managers
Hampden-Turner
help
and an may
ethnocentrism on that
is not
easy
to avoid.
Too of
conceptions and
structure
intuition,
to develop their com experiences across the and business for managing petence doing than 50,000 The database comprises more world. cases from over 100 countries and is one of the cultural in order world's richest sources of social constructs. Woolliams and Trompenaars (1998) review the analysis under taken by the authors in the last five years to develop the the methodological underpinning approach
Recently Trompenaars with Hampden-Turner
not adequately developed. This presents implications across cultures and for doing business and managing for resolving KEY WORDS:
agement, cultural dilemma competence
ethical
business
man
trans
reconciliation,
work.
(Trompenaars
the concepts
and Woolliams,
into a new model
1999) have
on dilemma
extended
recon
1.
Introduction clear theory that the quest of international that let such for a universal ethics is based
This paper reviews ciliation of cultural differences. to in dilemmas of cross relation these latest updates
cultural business ethics. The paper asserts that knowl
edge in relation
to business
ethics is culturally
specific;
isManager, Ethics & Responsible Business Chris Moon Practice Consulting, Arthur Andersen. He is Secretary MBA Business Ethics and taught all the ofEBEN-UK classes at The Management School, Imperial College, University of London, for 3 years. He has published over 20 articles and several book chapters concerning Business Ethics; and is a member of The Institute of Social and and a Fellow of the Royal Ethical AccountAbility the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Society for
Commerce.
valuable
(1985, and De George 1992). However, (1985, 1989) to draw on their the authors of this paper wish own research and Moon, 1999) and (Woolliams in the arena of cross-culture, that of key gurus such as Trompenaars Hampden-Turner of current understanding work of writers being provocative can be gleaned. ethical codes and Trompenaars, (1993) to increase the depth (1998), and to add value ethics to the By field.
is Clifford Thames Peter Woolliams of Professor International Business at the Anglia Business School at the having been formerly Professor ofManagement East London Business School. He has worked exten
sively as an academic and practitioner consultant
in the business
leading organisations
interests business are compar dynamics.
because they are subjective reader. Any quest by each interpreted differently of a universal for the application code that fails to take Of this into account be should be abandoned. value course itmay true that most societies
He
has been visiting researchfellow for the Centre for International Business Studies (Amsterdam) 10 years and has worked closely with Dr. Fons Trompenaars and
Charles Hampden-Turner.
Dr.
etc. privacy, in their prac vary considerably to managers Thus the value interpretation. promise-keeping,
2000. Journal of Business Ethics 27: 105-115, jfegl r" ? 2000 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in theNetherlands.
106 Chris J. Moon comes from under professionals and the standing evaluating meaning they give to or to codes any published evolving thereby deter mine effective behaviours. appropriate personal and business The through available undertake their authors to achieve have attempted this the development of computer models on CD-ROM users to that enable self-sufficiency evaluations The in rationale the to explore for this of
and Peter Woolliams inter structured discussion; through and oral views, histories, cognitive mapping, such that idiomatic based strategy consulting, and oddities were ironed temporary ambiguities validated out. format The was rationale that behind the forced-choice reconstructs the respondent the culture how they perceive through around them ought to behave:
approach
research
although
not
all
respondents,
would
probably
behave
in ways of which their culture cultural beliefs prove ill suited of successful business we might
meanings to appar
the same
well-known things. Trompenaars' seven dimensions of cross culture and explain these generalise owe their origin from the to between given relationships of with relationships Research environment). their
deemed "unethical", "corrupt", for Rules insider against "illegal". dealing, are to difficult where enforce, example, particularly lies in better information. competitive advantage
is always and former, per actual which se." a gap conduct. leads between Ours to tions the cultural prescrip is a description conduct, of not
to structure, helps differences. They different meanings meanings people, time and nature
There
approved
conduct
and Trompenaars,
(the are themselves and techniques methods processes, in which related to the cultures they are used and have dated United been developed. How can we overcome vali in the had defensive responsiveness in Anglo-Saxon Arab Emirates? to a questionnaire countries for use A recent researcher
dilemmas never
to be
swear on the Quaran with to jointly even consider dent before he would a questionnaire (Al-Refaei, that contained 1998). ethical
common to the experiences of are getting in all cultures. "You . . ."; "An dismissal is being employee's . . ."; "You have come a secret from
. . .". Translation problems across
cultures consider
were
considered
translators scenario
to and
to "balance were 2. The an research initial data set of 50,000, Woolliams some 40,000 selected in from 60 countries for managers operations from
the alternatives".
undertaken Thus
country.
From
and Trompenaars valid comparative order to validate and multi-national faced with barriers of
as a result East
international
was norma the questionnaire of coherence, pragmatism, tively The of the and reliability correspondence. in the questionnaire dimension scales inherent in terms
was
selected
on tests using revised based constantly measure of internal Cronbach's consistency Alpha of for each combinatorial scale. Administration was carefully managed to
into national research of existing were Scenarios and organizational culture. pre a two between dilemma that portrayed sented such friends. among The as respect for law and 58-item questionnaire loyalty was
principles
responsiveness by ensuring the independent etc; and emphasising anonymity, basis of the research. The dilemmas were selected on the basis that
Managing shared by all they were is significant degree. What to the challenge response found cultures of to
Cross Cultural
Business
a varying is that the attitude and each dilemma cultures. that values was Of arises of uni
significant concerning
nationality.
supports ecological
propositions
cross-culture.
to vary significantly between to the relevance subject particular ethics, between is the the group of dilemmas opposing seemingly and particularism. People are confronted with choices when
versalism
everywhere considering friends and/or Earlier as Lewin, (based mainly identifies 1936), the role of underlying of moderni
to their personal their obligations at The society large. universalism-particularism dilemma behaviour. there are defines how we Trompenaars two "pure"
other people's judge asserts in this respect that yet alternative types of
of universalism
as a feature
the family becomes or live on their own, People and career places family. Work individuals and personal life Technology replaces tends to
on
to adhere
to a moral
to by the culture in agreed are codes is This accepted. to the golden rule and its deriv
particularism largely rural communi so dictates. terrain Here everyone personally. from Stouffer incident
("do unto others as you would have them as well as society, unto do you9). In business this translates into rules defining conducts cor such as equal opportunities, political
rectness, etc.
the dilemma of a that poses a car in The illustrates this passenger paradigm. too fast. Does driver has an accident by driving to tell the truth the passenger have an obligation in court was or friend to protect his/her a mother, an illicit friend? lover If the an during
to know cited
At
an equally valid the other, we encounter on of particular based type judgement to people we is dominating know. Here the is and behaviour
by this relationship. Any ethical to is deemed relation this secondary to are as friends ship. Obligations perceived more to than obligations adhere important to a code that appears abstract. Behaviour is determined based process by a thinking on: "J must protect my partner or irre friend, what abstract ethical rules any may spective of say. Otherwise, The above this what arefriends for?" and by Woolliams extensive quantitative
or just an occasional work assignation, colleague, same i.e. the the judgement remain the may universalistic is to tell the truth. requirement Or or his or to protect his/her friend, her lover to conceal the affair, may mean that are of the situation into taken aspects particular the need
account.
Trompenaars' reveals statistically between individual icant others is often try from trends universalistic
extensive
data
on
this
case
nationalities.
differences highly significant there is always the Whilst to consider, there are signif cultures tend to be more
research includes
Trompenaars of analysis
Gulf Countries)
revealed a office to define head
mining sought linkage cross-cultural scales and as gender, education, religion, socio job
variables
system throughout Rules about "Pay for performance" individual sales may work well in coun are individualistic, but in countries
it as the universal
economic
grouping,
108 Chris J. Moon which are more or communitarian, highlighting compared the idea of dif
Questions concerns
counter-productive.
research has considered the previous an of "culture" in defining importance orthog most onal set of ethical principles, has focussed Whilst on corporate a rather 1994). value Thus, than for national culture (Linthicum is there dominant the work of ethics acceptance when example, the between the values of that a code can achieve value
the main focus of this paper are to of The attributed meaning. questions meaning in ethical life is, issues business and professional ? an important not of therefore, point enquiry least of all because Business and Professional may be misconceived code. salistic Acceptable on the assumption defined truth or or best way on debates ethical these Thus issues i.e. and as a type of univer behaviours be may that there is a uni code issues issues of behaviours. have deriving tended from issues ask such should to
Ethics
congruence values and organisational not it is force, surprising the organisation for which is based on the
versal Previous to
ignore
underlying and other the employees. Customers may be in second place. However, codes may that overlook the vital role culture plays. As Tayeb (1996, p. 85)
power dependency individual and business, often as to what extent business employees ? and church is itself as an the very
their and
alternative
act of asking
in Unitarian
cultures
organisations
. . . tend
to
follow
to whom
a narrow
they are
con Trompenaars the have such debates comment, tinually ignored fundamental about the of any question meaning factor or peoples. to people For example, when text to and and German from English translating trans seeks to achieve the translations linguistic In many "perfect do you cases confu ? translations" "pay
sive to the needs and interests of their employees alike. In pluralistic nations and their communities cater for the interests of a large organisations to be and are expected number of stakeholders, part of the society for its well-being. at large and take responsibility
and equivalence. parency sion results even with viz.: at the end even its of meal,
in more such individualistic societies, Similarly, as the U.S. it is maintained and U.K., that work and private life are emotionally distinct whereas societies in some communitarian such as Japan is a source of emotional and the organisation (i.e. it has a different meaning). even appears to correlate with National The Chinese the size of the organisation. appear material support culture to have owned whereas larger. a strong businesses SMEs Such preference (as in Taiwan for small family Kong) average much seem to factors (1996) recalls and English a number of samples between and Hong
it is Sony Walkman, marketing is assumed that the product (which technically it is manufactured and identical wherever same has the sold throughout the globe) meaning to customers. they product being disturbed by others, as a in China it is perceived whereas product can use to to music without listen they disturbing to listen to music without Same product, different meaning. Similarly, to different has different meanings "banking" others. peoples; European Writers Banking. to the "law" as rarely point arbiter of ethical matters. the final However, to define and business may prefer practitioners on ethics resolve and this ethics through is particularly in (company) law; changes to international relevant Islamic Banking and American is far different to other Americans However, it as a perceive studies show that can use
in the U.S.
are on
outweigh a matched-pair
organisations measures the differences were Indian consistent with and English
between cultural
the two
differences as a whole.
peoples
Cross
Cultural
Business
Ethics
109
1997). But (Carroll and Gannon, of because has a different purpose role deriving from parts of the world. drivers
to stop, but not so in Taiwan!). (Perhaps yes in Germany, cameras are in some countries accepted Speed (for the greater good), to individual liberties but are considered in others. minimum to managers truth between that these to also The and
its different meaning in different a red traffic light cause Does or pedestrians to not jay walk?
in disastrous result identity may In such a culture, the consequences. perhaps on scheme should the overall depend pay/bonus of the whole group or even go to performance up the group the group member with the greatest need.
B. Meaning
a threat law, may in terms of how important Regardless privacy culture has a private domain they will Kurt discuss with many other people. German
be
cultures. include:
Trompenaars A. Meanings
the Americans, appraising Psychologist, to in "It's the States because wonderful be said, so to tend be people hospitable. They have open can and visitors into personalities, easily get "It's because the concluded, a relatively small domain of which is offand because it's very sealed privacy sealed off, they can have a big public life". as In some this cultures (such American), to just a few is very domain related limited areas - and this leads to lots of relationships have is not privacy therefore SPECIFIC instance means actually involved. These are relationships. Specific that what is shared is determined in this contact". Lewin
rights groups
given
individuals or
Americans
compared B.
(Individualism
Communitarianism) to the degree of involve Meanings given or Diffuse) ment in relationships (Specific to C. Meanings and given body language other D. Meaning non-verbal given given given leakage to status to time to nature (Achieved or
where
Ascribed)
E. Meaning F. Meaning
one
specific
situation
at a time, without any for the overall relationship. alone in the specific moment. any symbolic between the
A.
Meaning
of rights the freedom culture, and serves society. to improve because individ first
of
is thought Society uals have their freedom In a COMMUNITARIAN of society even Thus what is the Performance? tarianism can
to improve and develop. culture, we take care at the cost to individual freedom. ethical position versus of Pay for Communi
more secret domains of personal What is is privacy. private clearly very different and is separated In specific from what is public. to in that cultures, nothing applies relationships one next situation one. Each relationship its specific roles and costumes. In a DIFFUSE culture is private. everything car is private, The is private. In the refrigerator the beginning of any relationship, you protect little drama with this privacy. Initially this leads to a no-no rela is very polite and deliber tionship. Everything a has distant and "cool" try ately feeling. Don't to do business at this stage of the relationship! Nobody is available being polite. intermixture for anything than yet other in diffuse For people the cultures, a source of private and public is of necessarily event of carries over into the is its own
Individualism
such impact on business policies as "pay for a Consider pay scheme performance". at the Head Office devised of a multinational company scheme would entiate some others one based in an Individualistic Culture. The the individual, differ emphasise individual from another, and show
as and achieved personnel having high in low. If this pay scheme is implemented a Communitarian the effect of breaking Culture,
110 Chris J. Moon comfort, confidence, from a specific and pride. But strength culture usually experiences burden. their a
and Peter Woolliams cultures. with insulted For if you and you show were acci
a team them;
their dis
separate tiny private the accom and enjoy large public, of highly and focused relationships, plishments further the freedom that comes from being able to break differences and the remake two such create a diffuse all kinds cultures. culture relationships. of confusion and alarm When meets a representa an individual These
in Italian pleasure by talking together excitedly out of the room. The and then walking Italians are an especially In if culture. contrast, affecting you a group of Indonesians insulted accidentally not out. They may feel would walk they probably not insulted but probably would show it. You not but even their find be trust aware that you in you would had insulted be damaged. and never failing you express your the more rapidly
a specific their domains of privacy culture, A German, Italian or Frenchman may see ? an as someone as rude and careless Englishman collide. is pushy and premature ? for instance and understand and them! the is not The in as trying someone to do who
importance very
in responsible see the may Englishman as snobbish Italian or Frenchman and - as bureaucratic that is typically
as a business and careful timid unreasonable, as seems someone to want "all and who partner or nothing" impractical. even when the "all" is completely
culture, you you do and have done. The emphasis the results you attain and the performance,
can exhibit and materialistic gains you as proof of your achievement. Competition status. In an and individual effort enhances ASCRIBING virtue culture, you are who you are by Your ascribed of your birth and position. to ability or innate dif status has no reference we when between individuals. ferences Thus, introduce in terms ourselves, of status. we Some are positioning ourselves them introduce may their job (achievement so by reference to their (ascribing).
of body language also reminds us that some and others societies the
to find ways people but each culture has so ? some pri its own sanctioned of way doing cultures and some publicly. Some express vately emotions AFFECTING their continuously. Europeans, easily. The Japanese relatively display because cultures" call these they "transparent their about show their emotion everything emotions material their possessions, ? ideas, beliefs In many other themselves, other people, the you these everything. societies, including never reveal what or In cultures such as Americans and
withhold
selves by firstly describing others may do orientated) family and social position
E. Meaning
of time
"All this about past, said in effect, St. Augustine nonsense because the only and future is present, on went But exists is he the that present." thing to say "we have the present of three presents, the present of the past, present of the future." A theme the and the present taken up to good with of his ghosts
you may Japanese, are feeling, thinking NEUTRAL cultures, considered childish, These differences lead to distrust
Dickens effect by Charles ? the and future. Thus, Christmas past, present, on we to the present depends meaning assign We time sense we relate to predominantly. which have moments where the present is much more
Managing affected Some of by the past and the participants understand others will others
Cross
Cultural
Business science
Ethics
111
view of
INTERNAL on
it tomorrow"
I say "I like this because "I and still others will say,
Very mechanisms
and participating". the problems that arise when or a to of you try system implement goal-setting that have into cultures management by objectives a small future orientation. like France Cultures and Venezuela the future on may because care the less about future In other for planning has little or no the
control put have everything. They budgetary to control control finances, they have pay-for to control compensation. performance They have staff appraisals that control, etc.; etc. They now have in the context of this paper ^ethical control"\ don't in societies does not work that approach in control believe and don't allow control. much societies, there. the organistic For model is still in American
This
cultures, The invented is very handy. Spanish are at For the and it! very "manyana" good evolves time, through Japanese, experience bearing future in the in the distant past and ending starting distant future. Often, they arrange their diagram as concentric circles. Westerners have the idea occurs in a much more that experience discreet to represent in chunks. Another manner, way to note is these extreme that you can perceptions structure time as either SEQUENTIAL or SYN
the present.
or boxing,
example, the basic principle is that you force, so you hit as hard as you In hit harder, you will win. the natural and Aikido, force from the the
Japanese
can
business.
the environment
and they are the environment strive to remain is theirs. They their environment. many Their includes customers, part of the envi take cus companies Relatively is not quality never talk about that are In their if it con
CHRONY.
are a natural
F. Meaning Nature
of nature
ronment, many Japanese tomers onto their boards unheard of in the West! issue such a big it because, so obvious minds, stantly
of directors. Likewise,
can sound very remote but it is very close in the sense of culture and how it affects business
at large. Look back at the dif and management over nature ferent ways have dealt with people to the Renaissance time. Prior in 15th century
Europe, nature was seen as an organism. Nature
was put
out there
there; by
of nature, was God. These designer, believed that there was the goal determined to be doing. Nature the locus of external the opposite. this organistic view one. If you picture da Vinci), you you the idea can than
beings in psychological it controls control The Renaissance into as amachine to realise a reaction
continue
a mechanistic that
accepted values are what you would practice whereas prefer. are convergent, we have When values and norms we little difficulty. When have a source of values and norms Ethical disharmony. placed at the centre of on its norms and values these can change are appropriate. values conflict, debate
are what
is the mech that you could control nature. This is anistic view of nature; that the environment we can out there that control with something
peoples'
112 Chris J. Moon ? of their groups it is known that although often their behaviour people reluctantly change first (norms) because they rarely address the issues norms and i.e. start to change the way they think (values) to the meaning they give things. is to ignore these differences The first mistake one's own own This ethical norms in different soci alienate and cultures. is a "win-lose" relation
aspirations,
to express
behaviour
a world
can be
business
begin a
reconciles dif process a shared per and values, fering thereby develops on to and business behaviour spective acceptable shared values, honoured Thus, by all. principles studies and can have
that identifies
principles may to make your adversary. A second easy mistake is to adopt the uwhen in Rome, do" do as Romans for of the sake Here, (?), or paradigm. harmony a more we to think that close may sale(!), likely our behaviours and (norms) by abandoning adopting we can "fit in" and be accepted. tension caused by trying to act out role and abandon the norms of the destination culture, In practice, the an unfamiliar
of general any statement a starting point. Whereas, only shown that cross-cultural training to: greater feelings of well-being be for host
dence with
the manager, improved relationships of correct the development nationals, of host culture better members, to the new culture, and higher per
one's own ethical code or prin to is fail as your adversary ciples, likely quickly to mistrust you. This will be a lose-win begins at best is only a lose-lose strategy. Compromise some strategy and still requires you to abandon of your versal position. have Attempts international been code made a uni to produce of ethics (cf. Donaldson 1995; Caux Round of the Caux code based on trying kyosei living to and and
In fact, (Black and Mendenhall, 1990). cause the lack of such training may be the of individual and organisational failure; the costs of
which
are estimated to and Mendenhall by Black over be $50?150K and for individual $2 failure, as a whole. The billion per year to U.S. business ethics of international to be for cultural business an essential relationships are thus considered
1994; Hosmer, The writers 1996). that this code be two extreme ethical
of component and sensitivity. training understanding a et al. (1988) pointed As Triandis out, giving a step to becoming gift can be an important a gift incorrectly member of a group, and giving could lead to ostracism. gift Japan where an important the giving part of relationship is significant considered has been This in as It is
this version of However, person. the universalism-particularism dilemma ignores the fact that the nationality profile of stakeholders the original issue. Thus American with share 50% of its shareholders
building. of the gift that (i.e. meaning) interpretation is the critical factor 1986). (Albert, must be able to interpret cultural Managers signals often overlooked through but more selective than this per they in cultural
from may have changed an American company holders from on may the Far East. now have
Its business strategy formulated an code may the basis of ethical acceptable on maximising shareholder have been focussed value whereas CEO mulation values The but
process:
and Graham, Thus (Adler 1989). a is first about another culture step; only learning one must cultural recognise heterogeneity. and Nelson be and trained with practices. (1995) They should respect argue that managers to business ethics can not to
Trevino beliefs
be more review
and on
the basis of the changed shareholder in PhD thesis (Dickerson, preparation). Table Caux Round does (1998) web-site a belief their in the statement reconciliation is only the of values start of a
rely on them (Donaldson, 1992) guide the murky waters of dirty tricks, payoffs, through these and bribes Adler, 1992). However, (cf. that the only real authors all miss the basis point intuition solution reconcile and is to recognise then respect these differences (Trompenaars 1998). then and
indicate that
Hampden-Turner
Cross
Cultural
Business To
Ethics
113 the work Woolliams of Trompenaars and and Trompenaars to produce diagnostic self tools to
support
and General Xerox, (e.g. Caterpillar, to deal with modified par perhaps contexts. for There complying may be rewards or with breaking these approaches
concerned based
company policy. Nevertheless, are highly in origin, ethnocentric developed a full and proper understanding of the without to ethical issues in of meaning given complexity different cultures: nepotism, values, incompatible of business the legitimacy expectations, public and wealth made creation. Noble attempts respecting market have been Ethic national to devise a Transcultural Corporate
investigate to clarify the meaning they give In this way, both at the level of the shared exchanges, the through of subjectivity and ethnocentrism
their own
problem can be exposed. Current research is accumulating to reconcile evidence that it is possible different
(Frederick,
that this is effective systems and moreover across cultures. in doing business and managing is the "new This has "added that approach" over and above "compromise value" solutions" value outcomes to all and produces acceptable ethically model parties and is based on a new fundamental conceived by Trompenaars and Hampden-Turner Hampden-Turner, have now expressed
managers probing moral guidelines, such (1992) may end compromise; international scriptive
attempts is that The danger as drawn up by DeGeorge used as the basis for (1989) fundamental end up as being overly pre
(1998).
is how following and Woolliams Trompenaars a typical dilemma. The
up being or Donaldson's
The Letter or the Spirit of the Law? a foreign buyer to buy contract with Six months after the ABC mining company had signed a long-term bauxite in ten annual instalments, the world price of bauxite collapsed. Instead of paying $4 a tonne below world to market price, the buyer now faced the prospect of paying $3 above. The buyer faxed ABC to say it wished
renegotiate the contract. The final words of the fax read: "You cannot expect us as your new partner to carry
alone
situation.
the now
ruinous
expense
of these contract
terms." ABC
negotiators
had a heated
discussion
about
this
Which
a. A contract is a contract. Itmeans precisely what its terms say. If the world price had risen we would not be are they talking about? We had a deal. We bargained. We won. crying, nor should they. What partnership End of story. statement of original It is an honest b. A contract symbolises the underlying intent. However, relationship. such rigid terms are too brittle to withstand turbulent environments. tacit of forms have the Only mutuality flexibility to survive. c. A contract is a function split the difference. d. A contract symbolises cumstances transform of both the underlying relationship and the legal system covered by it.We should cir the not
offset
It is an honest statement of original the underlying intent. Where relationship. terms must to preserve of that the mutual then be contract, spirit renegotiated It means precisely what the terms
consider
price
whose
they. We
would,
however,
a second
114 Chris J. Moon Option (win-lose). (lose-win). a is clearly the universalistic option b is the particularistic view c is the compromise solution
and Peter Woolliams be in wide for situations from ranging to business through and projects day-to-day are showing that the
important
Option Option
new
(lose-lose). to reconcile Both options d and e are seeking e an starts the opposing values. from Option to ethical in universalistic takes but viewpoint the opposing value and seeks to recon cile and find a unifying solution. ? is the Option reverse a and commences with particularistic view but still seeks a unified reconciled solution. are Both of these win-win New strategies. evidence an reveals effective behaviour to reconcile that propensity is of high performing New studies confirm high cor account
(available to explore and business managers professionals their own value and to identify their systems on various ethical scales. The dilemma position self-sufficiency analysis aids the user in and interpreting their relationship understanding to various and the meaning ascribe they pub resulting lished emerge dealing ethics. and/or ethical codes. What may proposed are new for business global paradigms of cross-cultural with dilemmas business
such propensity and 360 degree business and managerial effective 1998).
(Hampden-Turner,
Acknowledgements 6. This Trans-cultural competence Arguments demonstrates that paper is needed framework ological can competence a new method that a in order for peer through sented at: The Cross Cultural lOth-llth Conference European Ethics for this paper have been developed to papers pre in relation review on First International Conference Business Ethics held in Tunis, Fourth Annual of the "Business at Christ
manager
trans-cultural
managers High-performing more of this trans-cultural competence or compromise who give polarised and Woolliams, (Trompenaars American managers typically first, they say, and East Asian favour region This particularism, are able to trans-cultural the extent put
in the job. exhibit consistently than those responses 1999). While universalism
December, 1998; The of the U.K. Association Business a New Ethics Network Millennium"
held
15th-16th Church, Oxford, April 12th EBEN Annual Conference Challenging for coping business" lst-3rd a References Adler, Business with Ethics. New in The
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assignments and with diverse workforce, and managers in" overseas dealing with
ratings by both peers on for" and "success "suitability and/or and postings partnerships
in middle In fact, women a male than those adopting management a to tend in man's world approach perceived to reconcile have a higher propensity opposing values than their male counterparts. Although, diversity. ? other when cile
promise.
N.:
Co.,
to recon and unable severely challenged then these women also show signs of com competence is being shown to
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Managing
Cross
Cultural
Business
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