9. Dimensions of Diversity Person Race Physical Ability Sexual Orientation Ethnicity Gender Age Primary Dimensions Secondary Dimensions Education Marital Status Parental Status Work Background Income Geographic Location Military Experience Religious Beliefs Primary Dimensions Inborn difference - Have an impact throughout one’s life Secondary Dimensions Acquired or changed throughout one’s lifetime Have less impact – still impact self definition 0
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12. The Changing Workplace Dramatic Changes in the Customer Base Changing Composition of Workforce There are more women, people of color, and immigrants seeking opportunities Globalization Competition is intense 0
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15. Challenges For Management CHALLENGES OF CULTURAL DIVERSITY Source: Taylor H. Cox and Stacy Blake,”Managing Cultural Diversity: Implications For Organizational Competitiveness,” Academy of Management Executive 5, no 3 (1991), 45-56 Exhibit 13.3 0 Organization Culture Valuing differences Prevailing value system Cultural inclusion HR Management Systems (Bias Free?) Recruitment Training and development Performance appraisal Compensation and benefits Promotion Higher Career Involvement of Women Dual-career couples Sexism and sexual harassment Work-family conflict Heterogeneity in Race/Ethnicity/Nationality Effect on cohesiveness, communication, conflict, morale Effects of group identity on interaction (e.g., stereotyping) Prejudice (racism, ethnocentrism) Promoting knowledge and acceptance Education Programs Educate management on valuing differences Taking advantage of the opportunities that diversify provides Mind-Sets about Diversity Problem or opportunity? Level of majority-culture buy-in (resistance or support) Challenge met or barely addressed?
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20. Stages of Diversity Awareness Source: Based on M. Bennett, “A developmental Approach to Training for Intercultural Sensitivity,” International journal of Intercultural relations 10 (1986), 176-196. Highest Level of Awareness Lowest Level of Awareness Denial No awareness of cultural differences Parochial view of the world In extreme cases, may claim other cultures are subhuman Defense Perceives threat against one’s comfortable worldview Uses negative stereotyping Assumes own culture superior Minimizing Differences Focuses on similarities among all peoples Hides or trivializes cultural differences Accepts behavioral differences and underlying differences in values Recognizes validity of other ways of thinking and perceiving the world Acceptance Adaptation Able to empathize with those of other cultures Able to shift from one cultural perspective to another Integration Multicultural attitude-enables one to integrate differences and adapt both cognitively and behaviorally Exhibit 13.6 0
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23. High and Low Context Cultures Chinese Korean Japanese Vietnamese Arab Greek Spanish Italian English North American Scandinavian Swiss German High Context Low Context 0