Archive for July, 2008

China’s Entry / Exit Laws

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Coming to China any time soon? If so, make sure you know the rules and the laws.

China-Entry-Exit-Laws.pdf

China recently released this list of laws pertaining to foreigners coming to China, certainly due to the upcoming Olympic Games in Beijing and the half million, or so, tourists who are expected!

Communication and Context

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Communication and Context

A sender’s meaning is so connected to the context in which communication is happening that it must be taken seriously. Some examples of context items are as follows:

  • Sentences which surround a phrase;
  • Occasion when a specific type of speech is delivered;
  • Place and time a conversation is held

Illustration:
“The pitcher was hit very hard; two men died on base; murder the umpire; we were robbed; and the scalpers had a field day today.”

Each of these statements, taken out of the context of a baseball game would be frightening and likely not be a place people would want to go.

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Four

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Four

  • Rites of intensification — religious practices that increase group solidarity and commitment
  • Rites of passage — religious practices that mark an individual’s passage from one life stage into another
  • Role — the behavior, attitudes, and values associated with a particular status
  • Role conflict — conflict between the demands of a single role or between roles
  • Role set — an array of roles that accrue to a particular status
  • Rules of descent — a set of ordered relations limiting recruitment into various kinship groups
  • Secondary groups — utilitarian, formal, and impersonal groups
  • Selector — a tool used to discriminate among several inputs
  • Skill — the acquired ability to apply a given technique effectively and readil
  • Social class — those people on a social scale who see themselves as equal and are seen as equal by others on the scale
  • Social organization — the regularization of interpersonal relations
  • Society — a social organization made up of a group of people who share a geogrpahical area and a culture
  • Sororal polygyny — a marriage arangement by which a man marries a woman and er sisters
  • Sororate marriage — an arrangement by which if a woman dies childless, her sister marries the widower
  • State — a governmentall unit based territoriality, cultural organization, and formal government
  • Status — a position or place in a social system with its attendant rights and duties
  • Stratification — a hierarchy of statuses
  • Subculture — a cluster of behavior patterns related to the general culture and yet distinguishable from it
  • Survey — a research technique involving collecting data by systematic questioning of individuals
  • Switch — a valve with a finite number of positions
  • Technique — a set of categores and plans used to acheive a given end
  • Technological systems — those parts of culture that enable man to produce objective changes in his physical and biological environment
  • Technology — the sum total of all the social customs by which a people manipulate entities and substances of all kinds
  • Terms of address — terms used to address persons
  • Terms of reference — terms used to talk about persons
  • Tools — devices for transmitting, transforming, or storing energy
  • Totem — a nonhuman “progenitor” of a clan
  • Trap — a tool that is a selector combined with a container
  • Tribe — a group of people who share a language, culture, and territory and see themselves as an autonomous unit
  • Unilateral descent — descent traced through only one parent
  • Urban anthropology — the crosscultural study of urbanization
  • Valve — a device that passes different kinds or quantities of input at different times
  • Vehicle — a tool used to transmit stored objects, energy, or information through space
  • Vertical status — the hierarchical ordering of statuses

Successful Cross-Cultural Communication

Monday, July 14th, 2008

In order to succeed, communication of any sort requires full interaction between the linguistic, political, economic, social, psychological, religious, national, racial, and many other existential ingredients. Every message is “encoded” and “decoded” around seven main areas of human experience.

Seven Areas Involved in Successful Cross-Cultural Communication

  1. Ways of Perceiving the World: The World View
  2. Ways of Thinking: The Cognitive Process
  3. Ways of Expressing Ideas: The Linguistic Form
  4. Ways of Acting: The Behavioral Patterns
  5. Ways of Channeling Communication: The Media
  6. Ways of Interacting: The Social Structures
  7. Ways of Deciding: The Motivational Dimension

I have attempted (in previous blog posts) to describe these seven factors or areas involved in any attempt at Successful Cross-Cultural Communication.  Feel free to go back into the archives and read / comment on any of the areas that interest you.

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Three

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Three

  • Language — verbal, systematic, and symbolic communication
  • Laws — rules and regulations that are enforced by the state
  • Levirate marriage — an arrangement by which if a man dies childless, his brother marries the widow
  • Mana — supernatural nonpersonalized forces in animistic religions
  • Marriage — a pattern of norms and customs that define and control the relationship between a man and a woman, designating them as legitimate sex partners
  • Matrilineal descent — descent traced through the mother’s line
  • Matrilocal residence — a living arrangement in which a couple live with the wife’s family
  • Mechanism — arrangements of media designed to transmit or modify the application of power, force, or motion
  • Media — tools used to transmit matter or energy through space while preserving their essential qualities
  • Medical anthropology — the application of cultural criteria to the practice of medicine and response to medical, clinical, and educational practices
  • Moiety — the division of a tribe into two groups, based on birth
  • Monogamy — a marriage arrangement in which each individual has only one mate
  • Mores — social norms of a moral nature
  • Mutually exclusive — groups in which membership in one group precludes membership in the other group
  • Neolocal residence — an arrangement by which a couple lives apart from both partners’ families and sets up a new household
  • Noninclusive groups — groups in which joint membership is neither precluded nor requisite
  • Nonverbal communication — the process by which a message is sent and received through any one or more of the sense channels, without the use of spoken language
  • Norms — regular and accepted patterns of behavior
  • Nuclear family — a husband and wife and their immature children
  • Overlapping groups — groups in which membership in one group does not preclude membership in the other group or groups
  • Parallel cousin — the child of one’s parent’s same-sex sibling
  • Participant observation — systematic observation while participating in a society
  • Patrilineal descent — descent traced through the father’s line
  • Patrilocal residence — a living arrangement in which a couple live with the husband’s family
  • Peasant economies — subsocieties of a larger stratified society that is either preindustrial or semiindustrial
  • Phratry — a group of two or more clans held together either by kinship or mutual interest
  • Polyandry — a marriage arrangement in which a female has more than one husband
  • Polygamy — a marriage arrangement in which a person has multiple mates
  • Polygyny — a marriage arrangement in which a male has more than one wife
  • Primary group — a small, intimate, and informal group
  • Primogeniture — a system of inheritance in which the family’s wealth and position is passed on to the first-born son
  • Proximic communication — transmission of messages that utilizes space
  • Quasi-experimental design — a methodology similar to that of using an experimental design but in which the researcher cannot control all the factors
  • Rationalization — a psychological defense process by which an individual recasts a difficult situation into one that is acceptable
  • Religion — the shared beliefs and belief practices of a people. These may or may not be supernatural in character

The Motivational Dimension - Successful Cross-Cultural Communication

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Ways of Deciding: The Motivational Dimension

Every message is “encoded” and “decoded” around seven main areas of human experience. Let’s look at “The motivational dimension” which involves peoples decision making and what fuels it.

Decision making processes affect the actions which result from cross-cultural messages.

Asian peoples (primarily those influenced by Confucianism) will decide one day on a course of action or business focus and just as easily reverse himself the next day. Confucius said men should not live with single preconceived course of action. What seemed wise today may seem foolish tomorrow.

Feel free to comment on this post with any points / counter-points, questions, or illustrations.

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Two

Friday, July 4th, 2008

Glossary of Cross-Cultural Communication Terminology | Part Two

  • Endogamy — a sociological rule requiring a person to select a mate from within a culturally defined group of which both are members
  • Eskimo kinship system — a bilateral, linear kinship system
  • Ethnocentrism — the practice of interpreting and evaluating behavior and objects by reference to the standards of one’s own culture rather than those of the culture to which they belong
  • Ethnography — the descriptive study of human societies
  • Ethnohistory — the cultural history of a people
  • Ethnology — comparative ethnography
  • Ethnoscience — a linguistic approach to the study of nonverbal culture
  • Ethnotheology — a discipline concerned with the deculturalization and contextualization of theology
  • Exogamy — a sociological rule requiring that potential mates come from different culturally defined groups
  • Experimental design — a methodology used to control various factors in an experimental study
  • Extended family — a living arrangement in which two or more related nuclear families share a household
  • Family of orientation — the family one is born into
  • Family of procreation — the family one forms by marriage
  • Fictive ties — socio-legal kinship relationships
  • Folkways — low-level norms such as customs and manners
  • Foraging — food acquisition by gathering naturally growing foodstuffs
  • Formal government — an independent system or social institution set up for the purpose of governing
  • Fraternal polyandry — a marriage arrangement in which a woman marries a man and his brothers
  • Functional equivalent — something in one culture that performs the same function as something else in another culture
  • Government — a society’s mechanisms and structures for the maintenance of order and communal decision making
  • Group — a unit of two or more people involved in communication and interrelationship and having “unit awareness”
  • Hawaiian kinship system — a bilateral, generational kinship system
  • Horizontal status — a status on the same level or having the same rank as another
  • Horticulture — intensive types of agriculture involving killing certain plant growth and planing other plant growth with higher food value
  • Hunting — the catching and killing of wildlife for food
  • Hypothesis — a statement to be tested by a scientific methodology
  • Idiolect — an individual usage of a language
  • Incest taboo — the prohibition against mating with or marrying kinsman
  • Inclusive groups — groups in which membership in one group means inclusion in another group
  • Independent variable — a factor that is varied in an experimental study
  • Informal government — a governmental system based on an already-existing system such as the kinship system
  • Iroquois kinship system — a unilateral, linear kinship system
  • Kinesic communication — the transmission of messages by body movements
  • Kinship — a network of family relationships
  • Kin term — a specific term in a specific language used to refer to a kin type
  • Kin type — an abstract concept of a relationship that can be described in every culture