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Conflict and Innovation: Joint Ventures in China

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This book features China’s newly emergent transnational management culture. It uses established and new methodologies to analyze how different types of Sino-foreign joint enterprises manage cultura...
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  • 08 June 2006
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This book features China’s newly emergent transnational management culture. It uses established and new methodologies to analyze how different types of Sino-foreign joint enterprises manage cultural differences between various layers of managers and employees, while negotiating strategies that contain conflicts, uncertainties and frustrations.
Much of the book focuses on the relations among personnel and management within Sino-foreign businesses. It highlights how new elements have been introduced in the daily practices of management at the work floor and in the managerial offices, specifically in relation to improving human resource development and resolving conflicts. The book also examines how these transnational firms function in the broader context of Chinese society and politics.
In providing freshly researched cases and methodological studies by experienced researchers in the field, the book suggests alternative pathways toward innovative business management in China, thus making it attractive to academics and business managers alike.
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Price: $160.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: International Comparative Social Studies
Publication Date: 08 June 2006
ISBN: 9789004151888
Format: Hardcover
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Leo Douw obtained his Doctorate in the Humanities in 1991. He is Lecturer of Modern Chinese History and Society at the University of Amsterdam and the Free University Amsterdam. With Cen Huang and David Ip, he has edited in 2001 a book titled Rethinking Chinese Transnational Enterprises: Cultural Affinity and Business Strategies (London: Curzon). At present he engages in research on the organization of business enterprises and migration in colonial Taiwan (1895-1945).
Chan Kwok-bun received his doctorate in Sociology in 1978. He is Head and Professor of the Department of Sociology and Director of the David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies at Hong Kong Baptist University. In 2005, he has published two books: Chinese Identities, Ethnicity and Cosmopolitanism (London: Routledge) and Migration, Ethnic Relations and Chinese Business (London: Routledge). He is currently doing research on return migrants in Hong Kong.