Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?

This thesis argues that “culture matters” (Brook, T., 2002: 28) and inquires whether high commitment management (HCM) often advocated as ‘best practice’, fits Kazakh culture. Therefore, single profile of Kazakhstan on all 5 Hofstede’s (1991) dimensions was drawn first, for which findings of this wor...

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Main Author: Abenov, Askar
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/22829/
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author Abenov, Askar
author_facet Abenov, Askar
author_sort Abenov, Askar
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis argues that “culture matters” (Brook, T., 2002: 28) and inquires whether high commitment management (HCM) often advocated as ‘best practice’, fits Kazakh culture. Therefore, single profile of Kazakhstan on all 5 Hofstede’s (1991) dimensions was drawn first, for which findings of this work and inferences from the available research were utilized. Hereby, Kazakh culture is characterized by low long-term orientation (LTO), high masculinity (MAS), high uncertainty avoidance (UA) and power distance (PD), and low individualism (IND). However, using the same cultural framework of Hofstede it was found that HCM is more likely to be eligible for culture with high LTO, low MAS, UA, PD, and mid-ranged IND (e.g. Norway, Sweden). Thus, the case study shows that Kazakh culture is direct antithesis of what HCM is moulded for. That is, this dissertation concludes that HCM is not designed for Kazakh context, and, therefore, is unlikely to work and be successfully introduced in Kazakh business environment.
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spelling nottingham-228292017-12-28T19:14:21Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/22829/ Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan? Abenov, Askar This thesis argues that “culture matters” (Brook, T., 2002: 28) and inquires whether high commitment management (HCM) often advocated as ‘best practice’, fits Kazakh culture. Therefore, single profile of Kazakhstan on all 5 Hofstede’s (1991) dimensions was drawn first, for which findings of this work and inferences from the available research were utilized. Hereby, Kazakh culture is characterized by low long-term orientation (LTO), high masculinity (MAS), high uncertainty avoidance (UA) and power distance (PD), and low individualism (IND). However, using the same cultural framework of Hofstede it was found that HCM is more likely to be eligible for culture with high LTO, low MAS, UA, PD, and mid-ranged IND (e.g. Norway, Sweden). Thus, the case study shows that Kazakh culture is direct antithesis of what HCM is moulded for. That is, this dissertation concludes that HCM is not designed for Kazakh context, and, therefore, is unlikely to work and be successfully introduced in Kazakh business environment. 2009 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/22829/1/Would_High_Commitment_Management_work_in_cultural_context_of_Kazakhstan.pdf Abenov, Askar (2009) Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan? [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Abenov, Askar
Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title_full Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title_fullStr Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title_full_unstemmed Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title_short Would High Commitment Management work in cultural context of Kazakhstan?
title_sort would high commitment management work in cultural context of kazakhstan?
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/22829/