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Title: |
Towards a New Russian Work Culture |
| Sub-title: |
Can Western Companies and Expatriates Change Russian Society? |
Search Result:
| By (author): |
Vladimir Karacharovskiy, Ovsey Shkaratan Series edited by: Andreas Umland By (author): Gordey Yastrebov |
| ISBN10-13: |
3838209028 : 9783838209029 |
| Format: |
Paperback |
| Size: |
210x150mm |
| Pages: |
256 |
| Weight: |
.360 Kg. |
| Published: |
ibidem - October 2016 |
| List Price: |
22.00 Pounds Sterling |
| Availability: |
In Stock
Qty Available: 10 |
| Subjects: |
Regional studies |
| This innovative book offers a fresh perspective on the national work culture of Russia and the substantial role foreign institutional and cultural impact has had in shaping it. Russia's contemporary work culture is understood as a national system supplemented by new values and attitudes that have been adopted through the mediation of foreign individuals and corporations or in response to the challenges of Western competition. It is argued that the â foreign factorâ triggers change in the landscape of Russia's work culture, the scope of which depends on the type of influence. However, there is a certain core of the work culture that remains resistant to any external impact. |
| Reviews: |
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“This volume is by no means just an exposition of yet another point of view on the phenomenon of Russian work culture and its role in Russia‘s ‘modernization breakthroughs.’ It presents an unexpected and original approach, an absolutely new perspective of this seemingly old topic. On the one hand, the authors consider Russia’s national work culture in the context of ‘foreign influence’ and test it for resistance to external pressures. On the other hand, they reveal ‘the foreign trace’ in its fabric ― the features that were introduced and internalized in the course of direct and indirect contacts with foreign cultures. For the authors, Russian national work culture is not a finished, static entity, but a dynamic system that is in permanent interaction with (predominantly) Western culture and has largely developed in direct competition with it. It is this approach that makes this book exceptionally appealing.” -- Vladimir N. Leksin, Institute of System Analysis of the Russian Academy of Sciences
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“THE PUBLICATION OF THIS BOOK IN ENGLISH MARKS THE NEXT TURN IN the ever-important and ever-uneasy relationship between Russia and the West, both in its pragmatic and ideological dimensions
” Judith Pallot, University of Oxford, Europe-Asia Studies, November 2018
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