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Cultural Variability

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Individualism-collectivism. Uncertainty avoidance. Power distance ... Individualism-collectivism. All cultures have both individual and collective dispositions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultural Variability


1
Cultural Variability
  • Hofstede Kluckhohn Strodtbeck Hall

2
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Individualism-collectivism
  • Uncertainty avoidance
  • Power distance
  • Masculinity-feminity

3
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Individualism-collectivism
  • All cultures have both individual and collective
    dispositions
  • Individualism
  • 1.) The individual is the single most important
    unit in any social setting
  • 2.) independence rather than dependence is
    stressed
  • 3.) individual achievement is rewarded
  • 4.) The uniqueness of each individual is of
    paramount value

4
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Individualism-collectivism
  • Collectivism We consciousness
  • 1.) Characterized by a more rigid social
    framework that distinguishes between in-groups
    and out-groups
  • Greater emphasis on the views, needs, and goals
    of the in-group rather than one-self
  • Social norms and duty defined by the in-group
    rather than behavior to get pleasure
  • Beliefs shared with the in-group rather than
    beliefs that distinguish self from in-group
  • Great readiness to cooperate with in-group
    members.

5
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Uncertainty Avoidance
  • The future is unknown
  • The extent to which people within a culture are
    made nervous by situations which they perceive as
    unstructured, unclear, or unpredictable,
    situations which they therefore try to avoid by
    maintaining strict codes of behavior and a belief
    in absolute truths.

6
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • High-Uncertainty Avoidance
  • Try to avoid uncertainty and ambiguity by
    providing stability for their members,
    establishing more formal rules, not tolerating
    deviant ideas and behaviors, seeking consensus,
    and believing in absolute truths and the
    attainment of expertise.

7
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Low-Uncertainty Avoidance
  • More easily accept the uncertainty inherent in
    life and are not as threatened by deviance,
    tolerate the unusual. They prize initiative,
    dislike structure associated with hierarchy, are
    more wiling to take risks, are more flexible,
    think there should be as few rules as possible,
    depend less on experts, more on common sense

8
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Power Distance
  • The extent to which a society prefers that power
    in relationships, institutions, and organizations
    is distributed unequally.

9
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Large-power distance
  • Believe that power and authority are facts of
    life. Social hierarchy is prevalent importance
    placed on status and rank

10
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Small-power distance
  • Inequality in society should be minimized. The
    powerful and the powerless try to live in
    concert.
  • The classroom location to measure power distance

11
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Masculinity-Feminity
  • The degree to which masculine or feminine traits
    are valued and revealed.

12
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Masculinity
  • The extent to which dominant values in society
    are male oriented. These cultures are associated
    with such behaviors as ambition, differentiated
    sex roles, achievement, the acquisition of money,
    and signs of manliness.

13
Hofstedes Value Dimensions
  • Femininity
  • Stress caring and nurturing behavior. A feminine
    world view maintains that people need not be
    aggressive and that men and women can assume
    nurturing roles it also promotes sexual equality
    and holds that people and the environment are
    important. Gender roles are more fluid.
    Interdependency and androgyny are the ideal.

14
Kluckhohns Strodtbecks Value Orientations
  • All people turn to their culture to answer the
    same basic questions.
  • What is the character of human nature
  • What is the relationship of humankind to nature?
  • What is the orientation toward time?
  • What is the value placed on activity?
  • What is the relationship of people to each other?

15
Kluckhohns Strodtbecks Value Orientations
16
Halls Culture orientations
  • High-Context Low-Context
  • Monochronic Polychronic Time

17
Halls Culture Orientations
  • Context (high or low)
  • The degree to which meaning comes from the
    settings or from the message being exchanged.

18
Halls Culture Orientations
  • High Context
  • The meaning is in the situation (context).
  • For most normal transactions in daily life these
    culture do not require, nor do they expect, much
    in-depth, background actions in daily life they
    do not require, nor do they expect, much in-depth
    background infromation. Its not necessary to
    verbalize everything.
  • Implicit indirect

19
Halls Culture orientations
  • Less homogeneous populations
  • Each time others interact they need detailed
    background information
  • Meaning is in the message
  • Explicit direct

20
Halls Culture orientations
  • Monochronic time
  • Urges people to do one thing at a time. Time is
    like a long ribbon of highway that can be sliced
    into segments. Have a high need for
    closurecompleting a task or coming to a
    conclusion before beginning something else

21
Halls Culture orientations
  • Polychronic time
  • Members think in terms of pictures or
    configurations nonlinear orientation to time
    think about and attempt to do many things
    simultaneously.
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