Cross-Cultural Organizational Behavior
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2007
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Annual Review of Psychology
Volume
58
Publisher
Annual Reviews
First Page
479
Last Page
514
Abstract
This article reviews research on cross-cultural organizational behavior (OB). After a brief review of the history of cross-cultural OB, we review research on work motivation, or the factors that energize, direct, and sustain effort across cultures. We next consider the relationship between the individual and the organization, and review research on culture and organizational commitment, psychological contracts, justice, citizenship behavior, and person-environment fit. Thereafter, we consider how individuals manage their interdependence in organizations, and review research on culture and negotiation and disputing, teams, and leadership, followed by research on managing across borders and expatriation. The review shows that developmentally, cross-cultural research in OB is coming of age. Yet we also highlight critical challenges for future research, including moving beyond values to explain cultural differences, attending to levels of analysis issues, incorporating social and organizational context factors into cross-cultural research, taking indigenous perspectives seriously, and moving beyond intracultural comparisons to understand the dynamics of cross-cultural interfaces.
Recommended Citation
Gelfand, Michele J.; Erez, Miriam; and Aycan, Zeynep, "Cross-Cultural Organizational Behavior" (2007). All UNF Research. Paper 8.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/unf_research/8
Comments
Originally published by Annual Reviews. Publisher's PDF and HTML fulltext available through remote link.