Betina Szkudlarek, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in Management at the University of Sydney Business School. Betina's core research interests lie at the intersection of cross-cultural management, international HRM, and management of diversity. Her work has been published in top-tier international journals such as Organization Studies, Human Resource Management, and Journal of Business Ethics and featured in multiple national and international media outlets. Betina has worked with numerous multinational corporations and not-for-profits on developing intercultural competence and fostering global leadership excellence. Beyond her academic commitments, Betina holds the post of Strategic Sustainability and Growth Consultant with the United Nations. Laurence Romani, Ph.D, is Associate Professor at the Stockholm School of Economics (Sweden). Her work focuses on issues of representation and interaction with the cultural Other in respectful and enriching ways. She considers contributions from critical management, feminist and postcolonial organization studies to further cross-cultural management research and teaching. Laurence has published articles in journals such as Organization, Organizational Research Method, Journal of Business Ethics or the International Journal of Cross-Cultural Management and multiple book chapters in international handbooks and edited volumes. Laurence works on the promotion of critical cross-cultural management studies with the organization of conference tracks (CMS, EGOS), editorial work (Journal of Business Ethics) and edited volumes such as Cases in Critical Cross-Cultural Management: An Intersectional Approach to Culture (Routledge) co-edited with Jasmin Mahadevan and Henriett Primecz. Dan V. Caprar, MBA, Ph.D., is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Sydney Business School. Dan's work reflects his interest in understanding how individuals are influenced by their work and life contexts, and how, in turn, they can shape these contexts. As such, his research, teaching, and consulting are focused on culture, identity, and leadership. His research has been published in top tier journals (e.g., Journal of International Business Studies, Human Relations, Academy of Management Learning and Education, Journal of Business Ethics, etc.) and prestigious books. He also engages in public debates via media contributions and community events. Besides teaching in the MBA and Executive Education programs at the University of Sydney, Dan conducts executive coaching sessions and independent learning programs. Joyce Osland, Ph.D. is the Lucas Endowed Professor of Global Leadership and Executive Director of the Global Leadership Advancement Center at San Jose State University. In addition to founding the center, she also co-founded the innovative GLLab, which takes an assessment center approach to global leadership development. Joyce won her field's highest teaching award based on her contributions to global leadership development and experiential learning. She is also a prolific, award-winning scholar with over 150 publications. Joyce co-edits Advances in Global Leadership and Global Leadership: Research, Practices, and Development. In addition to speaking, consulting and training at global companies, non-profits and universities, Joyce is a senior partner of the Kozai Group, which creates instruments that assess global competencies. Prior to becoming an academic, Joyce lived and worked for 14 years in seven countries, primarily in the field of international development and training.
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Introduction: Contemporary Shifts in Cross-Cultural Management - Betina Szkudlarek, Laurence Romani, Dan Caprar, & Joyce Osland Setting the Stage - Cross-Cultural Interaction: Creating Success in the Twenty-First Century - Nancy J. Adler & Zeynep Aycan Part 1: Multiple Research Paradigms for the Study of Culture Chapter 1: Culture in Cross-Cultural Management: its Seminal Contributors from a Positivist Perspective - Sonja Sackmann Chapter 2: Interpretive Approaches to Culture - Martine Cardel Gertsen & Mette Zolner Chapter 3: Critical Perspectives on Cross-Critical Management - Laurence Romani, Mehdi Boussebaa, & Terence Jackson Chapter 4: The Concept of Culture in CCM: Genealogical Considerations - Jasmin Mahadevan Chapter 5: On Paradigm Tolerance in Cross-Cultural Management Research - Mark Mendenhall & Thomas Hippler Part 2: Research Methods in Cross-Cultural Management Chapter 6: Survey Methods in Cross-Cultural Management - Yuan Liao Chapter 7: Experimental Methods for Cross-Cultural Management - Ronald Fischer & Johannes Alfons Karl Chapter 8: Ethnography and Cross-Cultural Management - Fiona Moore & Jasmin Mahadevan Chapter 9: Methods of Critical Cross-Cultural Management - Laurence Romani, Jasmin Mahadevan, & Henriett Primecz Chapter 10: The Uneasy Relationship Between the Case Study and Cross-Cultural Management - Rebecca Piekkari, Catherine Welch, & Mette Zolner Chapter 11: Towards Greater Methodological Awareness and Researcher Reflexivity - Anne-Marie Soderberg Part 3: Cross-Cultural Management and Intersecting Fields of Study Chapter 12: Languages and Cross-Cultural Management - Susanne Tietze & Rebecca Piekkari Chapter 13: Cross-Cultural Issues in Knowledge Management: A Multi-Discourse Review - Harun Emre Yildiz Chapter 14: Global Talent Management - Hugh Scullion, Martin Mullholland, & Monica Zaharie Chapter 15: Ethics in the Context of Cross-Cultural Management - Ilona Szocs & Christof Miska Chapter 16: The Role of Religion in Cross-Cultural Management: Three Perspectives - Tuomo Peltonen Chapter 17: Cross-Cultural and Diversity Management Intersecting in Global Diversity Management: Tensions and Opportunities - Laurence Romani & Charlotte Holgersson Chapter 18: Producing Knowledge on Cross-Cultural Management: Conditions, Connections, Consequences - Janne Tienari Part 4: Individuals and Teams in Cross-Cultural Management Chapter 19: Cross-Cultural Management & Cultural Identity: Past Perspectives and Present Prerequisites - Mary Yoko Brannen Chapter 20: Culture, Context, and Work Motivation - Carlos J. Sanchez-Runde & Richard M. Steers Chapter 21: Cross-Cultural Management and Intercultural Communication - Mary M. Meares & Janet M. Bennett Chapter 22: The Role of Trust in Cross-Cultural Management - Markus Pudelko & Jiaxuan Liu Chapter 23: Cross-Cultural Teamwork - Mary Zellmer-Bruhn & Mary M. Maloney Chapter 24: Cross-Cultural Comparative Leadership Studies: A Critical Look to the Future - Ann Herd & Kevin Lowe Chapter 25: The Birth of a New Field from CCM: Global Leadership - Joyce S. Osland, Rikke Kristine Nielsen, Mark M. Mendenhall, & Allan Bird Chapter 26: Some Thoughts on Cross-Cultural Management Research - David C. Thomas Part 5: Global Mobility and Cross-Cultural Management Chapter 27: Global migration and cross-cultural management: Understanding the past, moving towards the future - Eun Su Lee, Duc Cuong Nguyen, & Betina Szkudlarek Chapter 28: The Changing Context of Expatriation and its Impact on Cross-Cultural Management - Yvonne McNulty & Chris Brewster Chapter 29: A 'Change' Perspective of Repatriation: Review and Research Recommendations - Eren Akkan, B. Sebastian Reiche, & Mila B. Lazarova Chapter 30: Refugees and Cross-Cultural Management Studies - Priya A. Roy, Betina Szkudlarek, & Dan V. Caprar Chapter 31: The Nonlinear Relationships in Cross-Cultural Management and Global Mobility - Paula Caligiuri & Jaime Bonache Part 6: Developing Intercultural Competence Chapter 32: Conceptualizing Cross-Cultural Management Competence - Snejina Michailova, Nigel Holden, & Smita Paul Chapter 33: Developing Intercultural Competency: With a Focus on Higher Education - Allan Bird, Gary Oddou & Michael Harris Bond Chapter 34: Cross-Cultural Training - Vasyl Taras, Yonghong Liu, Anju Mehta, Madelynn R.D. Stackhouse, & Maria Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez Chapter 35: Developing Intercultural Management Competences: The Next Frontier is Inward Bound - Martha Maznevski

