In this article, we discuss the importance of a cross-cultural approach to organizational behavior. To do so, we illustrate how cross-cultural research in the past two decades has enabled us to reconceptualize constructs, revise models, and extend boundary conditions in traditional organizational behavior theories. We focus on three domains—teams, leadership, and conflict—and review cross-cultural empirical evidence that has extended several theories in each of these domains. We support the claim that even well-established organizational behavior theories vary in the extent to which they may be applied unilaterally across cultures, thus identifying the critical need to advance these theories via a cross-cultural research agenda.
CITATION STYLE
Gibson, C. B., & McDaniel, D. M. (2010). Moving Beyond Conventional Wisdom. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 5(4), 450–462. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691610375560
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