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please post for junior faculty and PH D students

  • 1.  please post for junior faculty and PH D students

    Posted 07-12-2010 08:33


    Doctoral Program in Organization and Management Education

    An <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:placetype w:st="on">Interuniversity</st1:placetype> <st1:placename w:st="on">Graduate</st1:placename> <st1:placetype w:st="on">School</st1:placetype></st1:place> Collaboration of Five Danish Universities

    Present

     

    6th Master Class and Conference:

     

    Global and Cross-Cultural Management

     

    Lectures & discussion sessions on

    Foundations of Cross Cultural Management Research

    Past, Current & Future Trends of C.C. Mgt. Research

    Presentations and Feedback on Research/PhD. projects/papers

     

    Lecturers include:

    Geert Hofstede, Mark F Peterson, Gert Jan Hofstede, and Michael Minkov

     

    Coordinator:

    Mikael Søndergaard, Aarhus University

     

    Time and Place:

    September 26th to October 1st

    2010

     

    School of Economics and Management

    Bartholins Allé 10, Aarhus University

    DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark

     

    Application and Fee:

    Please apply before August 15 2010 to: Lisbeth Widahl, Department of Management, Aarhus School of Business, email: liw@asb.dk  A fee of 450 Euros will be charged to cover expenses during the workshop and most reading materials. Inexpensive university accommodation is available.www.au.dk/en/facultiesdepartmentsetc/otherunits/gaesthus/

     

    Further Information:

    www.dome.asb.dk   & www.asb.dk/article.aspx?pid=26238

     

    Purpose and Content. 

                                 This PhD workshop and conference aims at creating a stimulating and relevant learning environment providing the participants with a background and perspective for carrying out empirical cross cultural management studies about a broad array of issues. Newcomers to the field are likely to find the PhD master class and its readings useful as a basic introduction to classic perspectives and key publications in the field. Advanced junior researchers in the field are likely to find the master class and its readings useful because of its analysis of the context of well known contributions and controversies surrounding landmark studies. The set of readings we present provides a broad, interdisciplinary perspective. Doing international organizational studies requires a certain degree of breadth, unlike most other fields of social science.     

    The master class is designed to be both a workshop where the participants discuss selected readings guided by the facilitators as well as a conference where the participants present a piece of their own research often related to their PhD project. Feedback on these presentations is an important part of the master class. The participants will have access to selected readings in time to prepare for the workshop. Participants are expected to send in questions, reflections or general remarks prior to the workshop. The facilitators will organize the discussion in part around this input.

    The content of the workshop is divided into four major sections. The first section deals with universality and cultural specificity.  We attempt to answer the overall question: why should we include culture in organizational and management research? The second section describes the projects that started up the field. It deals with basic social science theory and early international organizational studies. Readings derive from emerging anthropology, sociology and psychology as well as international organizational studies until 1980.  We attempt to answer the question: how and why was culture studied in international organizational studies of management and what was the status of the field in 1980? The third section covers Hofstede's Culture's Consequences project and reactions to it. Hofstede's project (1980, 2001) is considered pivotal to the field as it provided a substantial degree of structure and basis for subsequent national level research and application which at times has been overused and even abused. A careful reading of Hofstede's work is essential to any scholarship that deals with organizations, cross-cultural management and national culture.  This section attempts to answer the question: what did the paradigm introduced by the Culture's Consequences project contribute to the field of international organizational studies of management?  The fourth section deals with alternatives within the paradigm of Culture's Consequences by discussing alternative value dimension approaches and paradigm variants. This section deals with debates about studying culture dimensions and attempts to answer the question: what projects reflect the paradigm of Culture's Consequence's project and what have they contributed to the field of international organizational studies of management? To conclude, the workshop deals with current and future debates in order to outline what future research agendas may emerge.

    During the facilitation the world class scholars will present results from new research projects for example a new dimension of cultural differences based on Michael Minkov's analysis of the World Values Survey data. Moreover adjustments and additions to the Hofstede dimensions will presented based on  work presented in Hofstede, Hofstede, Minkov, 2010, Cultures and Organizations: Software of the Mind.  Revised and expanded 3rd Edition. Mark F. Peterson will discuss many new research findings regarding societal differences in social structures, within-nation regional variability, and cross cultural research methods with implications for organizations as well as new developments in the field based on his articles and his work with the Handbook of Cross Cultural Management Research.  Jan Gert Hofstede will present the concept of moral circle adding to the Hofstede framework as well as applications in cross cultural teaching and research.