In a state of stunned disbelief, I sat immobilized watching the
Paris massacres unfold. Then, on the
heels of Paris . . . the San Bernardino shootings emerged. Media have since covered little else. Journalists were herded in droves to Paris and
California to recount the tragic events in hopes of capturing glimpses of new
developments—pundits wasted no time spouting their reactions and predictions. Graphic images and audio clips of explosions
and gunfire conveyed what is described as our new normal. Perpetrators’ final shots hadn’t yet ceased
when these dramas turned political—accusations, excuses, posturing and
finger-pointing.
Despite a myriad of questions swirling in my brain, “Leadership
in a Cross-Cultural World: A Crowd-Sourced Blog” has been silent since the
events in Paris.
After wrestling with a few ideas—post my personal reactions?
ask students to share their thoughts? remain silent?—I decided to invite you, my LinkedIn and blog followers, to share your
thoughts, suggestions, reactions from the perspective of global leadership and
cultural competence, as it relates to ISIS.
I point to the work of Judith Martin and Thomas Nakayama in
their 2013 edition of Intercultural
Communication in Contexts. They
emphasize the importance of a “dialectical” perspective in resolving complex,
cultural situations, and speak to this approach as “a lens through which to
view the complexities of a topic . . . looking at issues and ideas from various
angles: culture, communication, context, and power.”
A modification of Martin and Nakayama’s work, another
dialectical model referred to as “Levels of Interaction Analysis”—Identity, Understanding,
and Power and Politics—is a simple construct used to move students to dialectical thinking for
expanded framing and analysis. It’s structured like this:
• Identity (self and other)
Examining personal/internal identity
• Identity (self and other)
Examining personal/internal identity
• Understanding (cultural, racial, religious, differences)
Understanding across any difference divide
Understanding across any difference divide
• Power and Politics (history, politics, social movements)
Creating greater effectiveness when the first two levels (Identity and Understanding) are examined and understood.
Creating greater effectiveness when the first two levels (Identity and Understanding) are examined and understood.
The question is this:
Is it possible to comprehend the actions of ISIS and
fundamentalist terrorism using the frameworks we have come to rely on to assess
global leadership and intercultural competence?
A few questions I’ve asked myself:
• Is cultural analysis so different on a global scale?
• Is it only through the lens of power and politics that we should
now view the world?
• Is cultural self-assessment, with the hope of better
understanding self and other, a useless effort?
If the answer is “No” to these questions, then, why are we mired
in a “global imbroglio?” Don’t we have the tools—and the will—to begin
addressing this problem factoring dialectics into the solution?
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Posted on LinkedIn 12/16/15
Note: To comment, click "Name/URL" on the dropdown menu. Enter name or blog ID in the name field, and leave the URL field blank.
Posted on LinkedIn 12/16/15
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