全球热带地区的脆弱性?委内瑞拉和墨西哥国际经理人经验的民族志

H. Gaggiotti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

拉丁美洲热带地区一直被认为是由于恶劣的工作条件而加剧了国际派遣经历的理所当然的脆弱性。在国际管理研究的经典方法中,归因于全球管理者角色的复杂性存在于他们生活在永久对抗、调整、变化和适应条件下的“事实”中。文献通常将国际经理描述为永远经历一种“格格不入”的存在,因为他们所谓的原籍“民族文化”根据定义与目的地国家的“民族文化”不同。热带地区刻板的异国情调——被构建为旅游和冒险的空间,但在卫生基础设施、不舒适的气候以及社会经济和政治不稳定方面也具有不稳定的特征——有助于在这些地区建立高度挑战性的国际管理框架。在这篇文章中,这些刻板的观念是挑战。有证据表明,管理者关于“在热带地区工作和生活的经历”的叙述,更多地与他们对组织权力的负面经历和一种控制和承诺的单一组织文化的创造有关,而不是与热带环境本身的经历有关。该分析基于6年的间歇性纵向民族志田野调查(2005-2009;2020-2022年),国际和游牧的拉丁美洲专业人士在一家工业公司拥有的两个位于热带地区的工厂工作。
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Vulnerability in the Global Tropics? An Ethnography of the Experiences of International Managers in Venezuela and Mexico
The Latin American tropics have been considered spaces where the taken-for-granted vulnerability of the international assignment experience is exacerbated because of poor working conditions. In classical approaches to international management studies, the complexity attributed to the role of global managers resides in the ‘fact’ that they live under conditions of permanent confrontation, adjustment, change and adaptation. The literature typically portrays the international manager as perpetually experiencing an ‘out-of-place’ existence, as their supposed ‘national culture’ of origin is by definition different from the ‘national culture’ of the destination country. The stereotyped exoticism of the tropics – constructed as spaces for tourism and adventure, but also characterised as precarious in terms of their health infrastructures, uncomfortable climates, and socio-economic and political instability – contributes to the framing of international management in these regions as highly challenging. In this article, these stereotypical conceptions are challenged. Evidence is provided indicating that managers’ narratives about ‘the experience of working and living in the tropics’ have more to do with their negative experiences of organisational power and the creation of a singular organisational culture of control and commitment than with the experience of the tropical context per se. The analysis is based on 6 years of intermittent longitudinal ethnographic fieldwork (2005–2009; 2020–2022) with international and nomadic Latin American professionals working in two factories located in the tropics owned by an industrial corporation.
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