Başlık:
From the Great Wall to Wall Street : a cross-cultural look at leadership and management in China and the US
Yazar:
Yen, Wei. author
ISBN:
9783319330075
9783319330082
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
291 pages ; 24 cm.
İçerik:
From the Great Wall to Wall Street -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- About the Author -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1: Introduction -- 2: Chinese Characteristics -- The Rise of China -- A Different Mindset -- Chinese Characteristics -- Chinese Soft Power -- Mickey Mouse and Monkey King -- Appreciate the Culture Slowly -- Bibliography -- 3: Games People Play -- Tai Chi: The Ultimate Soft Power -- Yin and Yang in Motion -- The Three Ps of Tai Chi -- The Three Ps of Chinese Business -- Yin and Yang Politics -- Weiqi: Winning by Suffocation -- The Art of War -- Evasion vs. Head On -- Bibliography -- 4: Geography of Management -- Geography of Culture -- In Whole or in Parts? -- Crossing the River -- Soup or Salad? -- What Motivates Chinese Managers? -- Two Different Approaches -- The Chinese Relationship -- All in a Name -- The Chinese Dream -- Similar but Different -- Positive about Negatives -- Chinese Efficiency -- All in the Context -- It All Depends! -- Leader or Manager? -- Issues and Personalities -- Whose Responsibility Is It? -- It's Difficult to Be Silly! -- Chinese Management Styles -- The Confucian Manager -- The Tao Manager -- Bibliography -- 5: The Power of the Whole -- The Lehman Flu -- What Did China Do Right? -- Bibliography -- 6: The Irrationality of Being Rational -- Limits of Analysis -- Ouch! The Market Freezes -- In Quants We Trust -- To Tao or Not to Tao, That Is the Question -- Don't Fight the Fed! -- Bibliography -- 7: Union of Men and Heaven -- Zhou Dynasty: Origins -- Mandate of Heaven -- Patriarchal Workplace -- The Warring States and Chinese Philosophical Traditions -- Confucianism -- Bibliography -- 8: Contemporary Expressions of Tradition -- Confucianism as the Official School of Thought -- Pillars of Confucianism -- A Western Corollary -- Inner Sage and Outer King -- No Way but the Middle Way.
Ren Is for People -- The Chinese Are Confusing! -- The Other Kingdom -- Yi Is for Justice -- Li Is for Respect -- Guanxi and the Art of Managing Upwards -- The Ultimate Guanxi -- Zhi Is for Wisdom -- What Kind of Education? -- All Can Be Taught or All Can Learn? -- Bibliography -- 9: Etiquette with Chinese Characteristics -- The Chinese No -- A Coinish Way of Living -- As a Matter of Face -- Bibliography -- 10: The Chinese Model -- The Practical Chinese -- The Chinese Government Model -- The US Government Model -- The Family Model -- Parents Know Best? -- The Family Economic Unit -- The SOE Family -- Bibliography -- 11: Moral Hazard or Moral Imperative? -- Is a Chinese Minsky Moment Coming? -- Sunset for Suntech -- Market Reform with Chinese Characteristics -- Local Government Debt, Shadow Banking, Stock Market and … -- Local Government Financing Vehicles: Long-Term Good for Value -- Scared by the Shadows -- The Shanghai Roller Coaster -- Moral Hazard or Moral Imperative? -- Bibliography -- 12: Exporting China Inc -- When Going Out, Do What the Foreigners Do -- Journey to the West -- Haier: The Lower Sea -- CAO: China after Oil -- Bibliography -- 13: Cross-Cultural Lessons -- Revisiting Traditional Values -- Family Values -- Perseverance -- Tolerance and the Middle Way -- In Books there Are Houses Made of Gold -- Out-of-the-Box Thinkers -- Alibaba: A Crocodile in the Yangtze -- Sports and Business -- Bibliography -- 14: Two Systems: One World -- Bibliography -- Index.
Özet:
Wei Yen explores how differences in world views between Eastern and Western thought and culture have on management and leadership behaviors. In The Geography of Thought Richard Nisbett showed how the thought and culture of the East is rooted in Chinese Confucian ideals while that of the West goes back to the early Greeks. In From Great Wall to Wall Street, Wei Yen explores how these differences impact today’s leadership and management practices. He delves deeply into the two cultures and their philosophical roots, and explains why there can exist significant misunderstandings between the two camps. Yen was born in China, raised in Hong Kong, educated both there and in the US and then spent half his working life in the US and half in Asia. From his vantage point, straddling both cultures he compares and contrasts the pragmatic, wholistic Chinese (or Asian) management style with the rational and analytical Western management style. He shows their pros and cons, the areas where they differ and situations where one may be more successful than the other. Yen argues that understanding traditional Chinese culture, and how it affects management behaviors and current events, can help decision makers make better decisions in business, finance and politics. He further combines culture with credit analysis to argue that it is unlikely that China will suffer a financial collapse despite a slowing economy and high debt levels. Equally, he shows how that same philosophical traditions also lie behind China’s inability to innovate or project the “soft power” that the West’s globally successful popular culture has achieved. How can the West take advantage of China’s epic rise to strike win-win outcomes? How can the Chinese be more integrated into the global community and become a better global citizen in the future? How can policy makers make more realistic policies? None of these can be accomplished without first understanding where each other is coming from.
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Library | Materyal Türü | Demirbaş | Yer Numarası | Durumu / Lokasyon / İade Tarihi |
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Arıyor... | Kitap | EKOBKN0009665 | 658.00951 YEN 2017 | Arıyor... |