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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.

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Doing Critical Management Research

TL;DR: The editors of this collection declare its mission to be to ‘stimulate thinking on quality-related issues and to facilitate bringing quality into the mainstream of organisational effectiveness’, but the precise meaning of the second defeats me; in a way, this is emblematic of the volume as a whole.
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The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History

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Toward the African Revolution

R. W. Johnson
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Is National Culture Still Relevant to Management in a Global Context

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that national cultures should be considered even in the global economic context, and they show that management practices are embedded in national political cultures, based on attachment to local communities and institutions, government through consensus and to conflict solving by resorting to arbitration and pragmatism.
References
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The management of people across cultures: Valuing people differently

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the way value is attached to people in organizations across cultures and find that policies and practices developed in the West along instrumental lines see people primarily as a means to an end.
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Cultural Discontinuity and Arab Management Thought

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the cultural discontinuity and Arab management thought in the context of management and its environment in the Arab world, and present a survey of Arab management.
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Southern voices in management and organization knowledge

TL;DR: In this paper, a special issue on management and organizational knowledge (MOK) as it is practiced and constructed in the global south is presented, with a focus on the work of organizational scholars working outside the West who rarely appear on the radar of the most prestigious scholarly journals.
Journal Article

Americanization and its limits : reworking US technology and management in post-war Europe and Japan

TL;DR: In this article, Americanization and its limits: Reworking US technology and management in post-war Europe and Japan is discussed. But the main focus is on the transfer of technology from the US automotive industry to Europe after the Second World War.