Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Politics and power in MNCs: institutions, social embeddedness and knowledge
- Part III Politics and power in MNCs: headquarters–subsidiary relations
- Part IV Politics and power in MNCs: role of national identities and identity work
- 9 Subsidiary manager socio-political interaction: the impact of host country culture
- 10 Unequal power relations, identity discourse, and cultural distinction drawing in MNCs
- 11 National identities in times of organizational globalization: a case study of Russian managers in two Finnish–Russian organizations
- 12 Contesting social space in the Balkan region: the social dimensions of a “red” joint venture
- Part V Conclusions
- Index
- References
10 - Unequal power relations, identity discourse, and cultural distinction drawing in MNCs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Politics and power in MNCs: institutions, social embeddedness and knowledge
- Part III Politics and power in MNCs: headquarters–subsidiary relations
- Part IV Politics and power in MNCs: role of national identities and identity work
- 9 Subsidiary manager socio-political interaction: the impact of host country culture
- 10 Unequal power relations, identity discourse, and cultural distinction drawing in MNCs
- 11 National identities in times of organizational globalization: a case study of Russian managers in two Finnish–Russian organizations
- 12 Contesting social space in the Balkan region: the social dimensions of a “red” joint venture
- Part V Conclusions
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
While organizational scholars have shown a sustained interest in cultural processes in transnational contexts, the dominant approach in cross-cultural research has overlooked processes of culture construction and distinction drawing, and offers an a-contextual and a-political understanding of cultural encounters. Cultural identity, as it is usually conceptualized, starts from the assumption that national identity imprints a value-based, mental program or collective “software” in peoples' minds (Hofstede 1991). These cognitive models are represented through a small set of continua – individualism–collectivism, masculinity–femininity, power distance, anxiety reduction, long-term or short-term orientation (for similar approaches, see e.g. House et al. 2004) – which are claimed to manifest themselves in organizations through stubbornly distinctive patterns of thinking, feeling and acting located in the nationally constituted actors. Despite the appealing simplicity of a description in terms of dimension scores and the useful grip it promises to provide on a complex phenomenon, such a description gives a rather minimal, static and monolithic sketch of national cultures (for a critical discussion of Hofstede's work, see e.g. Ailon 2008). A few general characteristics are considered to be deep-rooted determinants of behavior that are assumed to constitute a true and timeless cultural essence.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Politics and Power in the Multinational CorporationThe Role of Institutions, Interests and Identities, pp. 315 - 345Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
- 12
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