scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

Rethinking Hybridity in Postcolonial Contexts: What Changes and What Persists? The Tunisian case of Poulina's managers

TLDR
In this paper, the authors highlight the importance of adopting a contextualized approach to hybridization processes that, first, takes into account the historical and cultural contexts from which hybridity emerges and, second, helps to identify the elements that change as well as those that persist when western management practices are imported into developing countries.
Abstract
Drawing on postcolonial studies of management, this article highlights the importance of adopting a contextualized approach to hybridization processes that, first, takes into account the importance of the historical and cultural contexts from which hybridity emerges and, second, helps to identify the elements that change as well as those that persist when western management practices are imported into developing countries. Using a discursive analysis, this article shows the ambivalent nature of the accounts given by managers (trained in western traditions) of the Tunisian company Poulina as they explain how they modernized their company through the implementation of a US management model. The managers' ambivalence takes on two distinct forms. First, while they seem to have internalized the rhetoric of modernization in insisting on how they used the US management model to overcome the 'dysfunctional' family-based organizational system, they simultaneously express resistance by detaching themselves from the French colonial organizational model. Second, when they describe the implementation of the US management practices and how workers resisted them, it seems that they have implicitly negotiated and reinterpreted these practices via a local cultural framework of meaning. Based on these findings, I argue that hybridity is best understood as an interweaving of two elements - the transformation of practices and cultural continuity - in which identity construction, local power dynamics and cultural frameworks of meaning jointly shape the hybridization process of management practices.

read more

Citations
More filters

Open Research Online Intersectionality on Screen. A coloniality perspective to understanding popular culture representations of intersecting oppressions at work

TL;DR: This paper examined popular culture representations of Global South migrants' work through combining a coloniality perspective with an intersectional analysis, revealing that representations of the effects of intersecting power structures should be understood as a dynamic phenomenon, embedded in different coloniality regimes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heuristique d’un processus d’hybridation de l’enseignement du management en Afrique : pratique d’accommodements et risque de « xessalisation » d’une école de gestion

TL;DR: In this article , the authors analyse the pratiques of an école de gestion africaine confrontée with the contradictions of la mondialisation and à l'envie démancipation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coprodução de conhecimento em gestão em (a partir de) países e sociedades emergentes

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate coprodução de relevância sulista do conhecimento no Brasil por meio de cumplicidade subversiva a partir de um nexo organização-escola privilegiado.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decolonizing international business

TL;DR: In this article , the authors argue that it is particularly important for international business scholars to join the decolonizing project given that the field's main object of study has been central to colonialism, and they call upon IB scholars to work on decolonising the field and to do so by not only interrogating its knowledge claims but also broadening the scope of its research so it can address the theme of neo-colonialism.
References
More filters
Book

The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analysis of knowledge in everyday life in the context of a theory of society as a dialectical process between objective and subjective reality, focusing particularly on that common-sense knowledge which constitutes the reality of everyday life for the ordinary member of society.
Book

The interpretation of cultures: Selected essays

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of the concept of culture on the concepts of man and the evolution of mind in Bali has been discussed in the context of an interpretive theory of culture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Culture in action: symbols and strategies*

TL;DR: For example, the authors argues that culture influences action not by providing the ultimate values toward which action is oriented, but by shaping a repertoire or "tool kit" of habits, skills, and styles from which people construct "strategies of action."
Journal ArticleDOI

Adoption of an Organizational Practice by Subsidiaries of Multinational Corporations: Institutional and Relational Effects

TL;DR: In this article, the adoption of an organizational practice by subsidiaries of a multinational corporation under conditions of "institutional duality" is examined, drawing on institutional theory, and they identify...
Book

There Ain't No Black in the Union Jack

Paul Gilroy
TL;DR: There Ain't No Black in the Union Jack as discussed by the authors is a classic book about race relations in Britain that is still dynamite today and as relevant as ever, this Routledge Classics edition includes a new introduction by the author.