种族与性别在亚太地区国际派遣中是否重要?一项针对中国人态度的探索性研究

Do race and gender matter in international assignments to/from Asia Pacific? An exploratory study of attitudes among Chinese

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT · 2008
被引 74
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

基于对中国和韩国EMBA学生的调查,研究种族和性别如何影响跨国公司高管选拔决策,发现不同情境下能力与人口特征的重要性不同。

Abstract

Abstract Based on a survey of EMBA students in China and South Korea, this article examines how two sensitive but potentially salient criteria—race and gender—affect the selection of an executive to head the (a) foreign operations of a U.S. multinational in China and South Korea and (b) newly acquired U.S. operations of a Korean multinational. The results reveal a fairly complex picture of how gender, race, and the interplay of these two factors might affect these decisions. In the Korean sample, competencies mattered more than race and gender in a senior executive appointment to the U.S. operations of Korean multinationals. Also in the Korean sample, race and gender outweighed competencies in assignments to Korea. In the Chinese sample, competencies outweighed race and gender in a senior executive appointment in China. Overall, Koreans had a more positive attitude toward foreign‐born Koreans than the Chinese toward foreign‐born Chinese for senior executive appointments. Implications for international human resource management and diversity management, both theoretical and applied, are discussed. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

国际人力资源管理多元化管理跨文化管理性别研究种族研究