A Knowledge Perspective on Ambicultural Management

Yassaman Imani

    Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

    Abstract

    Gaining access to markets, natural resources and technological expertise, and learning from local marketing and management knowledge and skills have been identified as the main factors behind Chinese firms’ foreign direct investments. An extensive body of literature explores most of these factors, yet learning from local management skills and practices remains conceptually and empirically underexplored.
    In parallel, there are general calls for adopting an ‘ambicultural management’ approach (AM), a superior style of management suitable for the current global economic crisis, to combine the positive aspects of the Western and Eastern management practices, while discarding their negative characteristics (see Chen & Miller, 2010, 2011). However, in AM Eastern and Western management practices are assumed to be rather distinct and acontextual. This paper enhances ambicultural management’s explanatory power by drawing on some theories from knowledge management and argues that the adapted AM becomes a useful and conceptually robust framework for exploring the extent to which Chinese firms learn from, and influence, the local management knowledge and skills of their overseas subsidiaries in Western countries.
    Original languageEnglish
    Publication statusPublished - 12 Oct 2012
    EventThe 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management in Asia Pacific - Shanghai, China
    Duration: 11 Oct 201213 Oct 2012

    Conference

    ConferenceThe 6th International Conference on Knowledge Management in Asia Pacific
    Country/TerritoryChina
    CityShanghai
    Period11/10/1213/10/12

    Keywords

    • Ambicultural management, Western and Chinese management interface, knowledge management

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'A Knowledge Perspective on Ambicultural Management'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this