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Cultural intelligence

Cultural intelligence or cultural quotient (CQ) is the ability to relate and work effectively across cultures, bearing similarity to the term cultural agility. The term has been used in business, education, government, and academic research contexts. Originally, the term cultural intelligence and the abbreviation "CQ" was developed in research by Christopher Earley (2002) and Earley and Soon Ang (2003). During the same period, researchers David Thomas and Kerr Inkson worked on a complementary framework of CQ as well. A few years later, Ang Soon and Linn Van Dyne[1] worked on a scale development of the CQ construct as a research-based way of measuring and predicting intercultural performance.

The term is relatively recent: early definitions and studies of the concepts were given by P. Christopher Earley[2] and Soon Ang in the book Cultural Intelligence: Individual Interactions Across Cultures (2003)[3] and more fully developed later by David Livermore in the book, Leading with Cultural Intelligence. The concept is related to that of cross-cultural competence.[4] However, it goes beyond that to actually look at intercultural capabilities as a form of intelligence that can be measured and developed. According to Earley, Ang, and Van Dyne, cultural intelligence can be defined as "a person's capability to adapt as she interacts with others from different cultural regions", and has behavioral, motivational, and metacognitive aspects.[5] Without cultural intelligence, both business and military actors seeking to engage foreigners are susceptible to mirror imaging.[6]

Cultural intelligence (CQ) is measured on a scale similar to that used to measure an individual's intelligence quotient. People with higher CQs are regarded as better able to successfully blend into any environment, using more effective business practices, than those with a lower CQ. CQ is assessed using the academically validated assessment created by Linn Van Dyne and Soon Ang. Both self-assessments and multi-rater assessments are available through the Cultural Intelligence Center in East Lansing, Michigan and the Center makes the CQ Scale available to other academic researchers at no charge. Research demonstrates that CQ is a consistent predictor of performance in multicultural settings. Cultural intelligence research has been cited and peer-reviewed in more than seventy academic journals.[7] The research and application of cultural intelligence is being driven by the Cultural Intelligence Center in the U.S. and Nanyang Business School in Singapore. Additional research and application of cultural intelligence has been conducted by Liliana Gil Valletta, who holds the trademark[8] for the term since 2013. Defined as the ability to be aware of, understand, and apply cultural competence to everyday business decisions, Gil Valletta has expanded the definition of cultural intelligence into a capability that yields a commercial advantage by turning cultural trends into profits and P&L impact. Since 2010, the firm CIEN+ and data science platform Culturintel is the first to use artificial intelligence and big data tools[9] to report measures of cultural intelligence and enable corporations to embed inclusion for business growth.

Four CQ capabilities

Ang, Van Dyne, & Livermore describe four CQ capabilities: motivation (CQ Drive), cognition (CQ Knowledge), meta-cognition (CQ Strategy) and behavior (CQ Action). CQ Assessments report scores on all four capabilities as well as several sub-dimensions for each capability. The four capabilities stem from the intelligence-based approach to intercultural adjustment and performance.[10]

CQ-Drive

CQ-Drive is a person's interest and confidence in functioning effectively in culturally diverse settings. It includes:

  • Intrinsic interest – deriving enjoyment from culturally diverse experiences
  • Extrinsic interest – gaining benefits from culturally diverse experiences.
  • Self-efficacy – having the confidence to be effective in culturally diverse situations
CQ-Knowledge

CQ-Knowledge is a person's knowledge about how cultures are similar and how cultures are different. It includes:

  • Business – knowledge about economic and legal systems
  • Interpersonal – knowledge about values, social interaction norms, and religious beliefs
  • Socio-linguistics – knowledge about rules of languages and rules for expressing non-verbal behaviors
CQ-Strategy

CQ-Strategy is how a person makes sense of culturally diverse experiences. It occurs when people make judgments about their own thought processes and those of others. It includes:

  • Awareness – knowing about one's existing cultural knowledge;
  • Planning – strategizing before a culturally diverse encounter;
  • Checking – checking assumptions and adjusting mental maps when actual experiences differ from expectations.
CQ-Action

CQ-Action is a person's capability to adapt verbal and nonverbal behavior to make it appropriate to diverse cultures. It involves having a flexible repertoire of behavioral responses that suit a variety of situations. It includes:

  • Non-verbal – modifying non-verbal behaviors (e.g., gestures, facial expressions)
  • Verbal – modifying verbal behaviors (e.g., accent, tone)

Additional research on cultural intelligence is being conducted by academics around the globe, including research on culturally intelligent organizations, the correlation between neuroscience and the development of cultural intelligence, and situational judgment making and CQ Assessment.

In business

Cultural intelligence, also known within business as "cultural quotient" or "CQ", is a theory within management and organisational psychology, positing that understanding the impact of an individual's cultural background on their behaviour is essential for effective business, and measuring an individual's ability to engage successfully in any environment or social setting.[11]

Elaine Mosakowski and her husband Christopher Earley in the October 2004 issue of Harvard Business Review described cultural intelligence. CQ has been gaining acceptance throughout the business community. CQ teaches strategies to improve cultural perception in order to distinguish behaviors driven by culture from those specific to an individual, suggesting that allowing knowledge and appreciation of the difference to guide responses results in better business practice.

Since 2010 and as presented in academia, national television, and other industry forums, Liliana Gil Valletta and the firm CIEN+ have expanded the definition and application of cultural intelligence from the individual to the organizational construct and architecture. Their model allows corporations and business teams to assess their level of cultural intelligence excellence index (Cix) based on how well they integrate cross-cultural analytics, insights, metrics, rewards, senior support, R&D, and profit plans to make inclusion the default. As defined by Gil Valletta, traditional CQ focuses on achieving individual competence while Cix focuses on achieving commercial growth.

CQ is developed through:

  • cognitive means: the head (learning about your own and other cultures, and cultural diversity)
  • physical means: the body (using your senses and adapting your movements and body language to blend in)
  • motivational means: the emotions (gaining rewards and strength from acceptance and success)

Ilan Alon, Michele Boulange, Judith Meyer, and Vasyl Taras have developed a new survey they call the BCIQ (Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient). While not rooted in the academic literature on multiple loci of intelligence, the survey provides practitioners with a tool to reflect on their understanding for use in an international management context[12]

The only peer-reviewed measurement of CQ is the multi-rater assessment developed by Soon Ang and Linn Van Dyne.

In government

Cultural intelligence refers to the cognitive, motivational, and behavioral capacities to understand and effectively respond to the beliefs, values, attitudes, and behaviors of individuals and groups under complex and changing circumstances in order to effect the desired change. The application and integration of cultural intelligence into the workings and practices of local government is advanced by community planner, Anindita Mitra in 2016 as a way to improve the effectiveness of local governments to respond to and serve a growing and diverse population.[13]

Cultural knowledge and warfare are bound together as cultural intelligence is central to ensuring successful military operations. Culture is composed of factors including language, society, economy, customs, history, and religion. For military operations, cultural intelligence concerns the ability to make decisions based on an understanding of these factors.

In the military sense, cultural intelligence is a complicated pursuit of anthropology, psychology, communications, sociology, history, and above all, military doctrine.

Diplomatic implications

Diplomacy is the conduct by government officials of negotiations and other relations between nations. The use of cultural intelligence and other methods of soft power has been endorsed and encouraged as a primary tool of statecraft as opposed to more coercive forms of national power; its further development is being stressed as a primary exercise of power as opposed to the expensive (politically and financial) coercive options such as military action or economic sanctions. For example, in 2007, US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called for "strengthening our capacity to use 'soft' power and for better integrating it with 'hard' power," stating that using these other instruments "could make it less likely that military force will have to be used in the first place, as local problems might be dealt with before they become crises."[14] In a speech in 2006, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged similar actions in support of her doctrine of "transformational diplomacy;"[15] she made a similar speech, again, in 2008.[16]

Governmental negotiation and other diplomatic efforts can be made much more effective if the knowledge of people is understood and practiced with skill. Joseph Nye, a leading political scientist, asserts in his book Soft Power that "a country may obtain the outcomes it wants in world politics because other countries – admiring its values, emulating its example, aspiring to its level of prosperity and openness – want to follow it. In this sense, it is also important to set the agenda and attract others in world politics, and not only to force them to change by threatening military force or economic sanctions. This soft power – getting others to want the outcomes that you want – co-opts people rather than coerces them."[17]

The sorts of effects Nye describes are much more effective if there is a willingness on the part of the influencing agent to respect and understand the other agent's cultural background. An example of diplomacy was a provision within the USA PATRIOT Act "condemning discrimination against Arab and Muslim Americans" response to the events of 9/11.[18] This provision ensures the protection of U.S. Muslims and Arabs, ensures a distinction between them and those that committed those terrorist acts, and lives up to the ideals of the U.S. constitution of non-discrimination. This precedent sets up an attitude of awareness of and respect for peaceful, law-abiding Muslims.

However, cultural intelligence can be used to the opposite effect. In 2006 and 2007, Russian president Vladimir Putin supposedly used his knowledge of German chancellor Angela Merkel and her fear of dogs to intimidate her during negotiations by bringing his Labrador Retriever, Koni.[19][20]

In the U.S. military

Cultural intelligence as a U.S. military term did not gain prominence until the late 20th century with the rise of low-intensity and counterinsurgency warfare. However, the importance of cultural intelligence has only recently become commonly accepted with the counterinsurgency campaigns the U.S. has conducted in Afghanistan and Iraq.[6]

Since the Iraq War and the War in Afghanistan, cultural intelligence has been seen as playing a more important role in the success of military operations in counterinsurgency. The U.S. Army and Marine Corps counterinsurgency field manual is explicit on this point:

"Cultural knowledge is essential to waging a successful counterinsurgency," and goes further, urging "counterinsurgents… should strive to avoid imposing their ideals of normalcy on a foreign cultural problem."[21]

The manual's logic is that the "primary goal of any COIN operation is to foster the development of effective governance by a legitimate government."[21] The manual points out that different cultures have different ideas of what legitimacy entails, and that operations at building legitimacy need to meet the host nation's peoples' criteria. Failure to recognize and respect a host nation's culture has resulted in the deaths of some NATO troops, and attempts have been made to make Afghans aware of Western culture and vice versa to mitigate some of these unintentional effects.[22]

Human Terrain System

To this effect, the U.S. Army developed the Human Terrain System in February 2007 to provide cultural information of host nations. The HTS program was the primary unified effort to provide this information to supplement military operations in areas where armed services were deployed. The program was also controversial, with the American Anthropological Association arguing that such efforts represented a conflict of interest and a possible violation of the ethical standards of anthropologists;[23] but it was defended by others as ethical.[24] The U.S. Army Human Terrain System ended operations in September 2014.

See also

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Earley, P. Christopher | Encyclopedia.com".
  3. ^ Earley, P (2003). Cultural intelligence : individual interactions across cultures. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4300-6. OCLC 51553576.
  4. ^ Johnson, James P.; Lenartowicz, Tomasz; Apud, Salvador (2006). "Cross-Cultural Competence in International Business: Toward a Definition and a Model". Journal of International Business Studies. 37 (4): 525–43. doi:10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400205. JSTOR 3875168. S2CID 28089540.
  5. ^ Earley, P. Christopher (2002). "Redefining interactions across cultures and organizations: moving forward with cultural intelligence". In B. M. Staw (ed.). Research in Organizational Behavior. Vol. 24. R. M. Kramer. Oxford: Elsevier. pp. 271–99.
  6. ^ a b Pilon, Juliana (2009). Cultural Intelligence for Winning the Peace. The Institute of World Politics Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-615-51939-5.
  7. ^ Ang & Van Dyne (2008). Handbook of Cultural Intelligence. ME Sharpe.
  8. ^ "CULTURAL INTELLIGENCE Trademark of XL ALLIANCE, LLC - Registration Number 4430285 - Serial Number 85937282 :: Justia Trademarks".
  9. ^ "Latino Group Bets on Big Data to Accelerate Diversity Across Silicon Valley". Forbes.
  10. ^ Livermore, David (2009). Leading with Cultural Intelligence. New York: AMACOM. ISBN 978-0814449172.
  11. ^ Alon, Ilan; Boulanger, Michele; Meyers, Judith; Taras, Vasyl (1 January 2016). "The development and validation of the Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient". Cross Cultural & Strategic Management. 23 (1): 78–100. doi:10.1108/CCSM-10-2015-0138. ISSN 2059-5794.
  12. ^ Alon, I., Boulanger, M., Meyers, J., Taras, V. (2016), "The Development and validation of the Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient", Cross Cultural & Strategic Management, Vol. 23, Iss. 1, pp. 78–100
  13. ^ . Association of Washington Cities. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  14. ^ "Speech". www.defense.gov. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  15. ^ Condoleezza Rice, speech made a Georgetown University in 2006, available at http://2001-2009.state.gov/secretary/rm/2006/59306.htm
  16. ^ "Transformational Diplomacy | February 12, 2008 | C-SPAN.org". www.c-span.org. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  17. ^ Nye, Joseph. Soft Power: The Means to Success in World Politics (New York: Public Affairs, 2004).
  18. ^ "UNITING AND STRENGTHENING AMERICA BY PROVIDING APPROPRIATE TOOLS REQUIRED TO INTERCEPT AND OBSTRUCT TERRORISM (USA PATRIOT ACT) ACT OF 2001". www.govinfo.gov. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  19. ^ Foreign Policy Magazine Blog, available at http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2007/06/14/putin_uses_dog_to_intimidate_merkel
  20. ^ "Putin-Merkel Summit: Germany and Russia Try to Smooth Over Energy Tensions". Der Spiegel. 22 January 2007. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  21. ^ a b "FM 3-24 15DEC2006 3-24 COUNTERINSURGENCY". everyspec.com. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  22. ^ Sieff, Kevin; Leiby, Richard (28 September 2012). "Afghan troops get a lesson in American cultural ignorance". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  23. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 November 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ Glenn, David (3 December 2009). "Military's Human-Terrain Program Might Be Ethical, Philosopher Says" – via The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Further reading

  • Earley, P. Christopher; Ang, S. (2003). Cultural intelligence : individual interactions across cultures. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4300-6. OCLC 51553576.
    • Bhagat, Rabi S. (2006). "Review of Earley and Ang, Cultural Intelligence, and Hooker, Working Across Cultures". Academy of Management Review. 31 (2): 489–93. doi:10.5465/amr.2006.20208695. JSTOR 20159217.
  • Ang, S. and Van Dyne L (eds). (2008) "The Handbook of Cultural Intelligence." New York: ME Sharpe ISBN 9780765622624
  • Livermore, David A. (2011). "The Cultural Intelligence Difference." New York: AMACOM ISBN 978-0814417065
  • Middleton, Julia (2014). "Cultural Intelligence: CQ: The Competitive Edge for Leaders Crossing Borders." London: A&C Black Business Information and Development ISBN 978-1472904812

External links

  • Huffington Post 'Teaching Cultural Intelligence Could Provide Advantages In Job Market'
  • Forbes 'CQ: The Test Of Your Potential For Cross-Cultural Success'
  • Economist 'In Search of High CQ'
  • The Times 'Trend watch: Cultural intelligence' 2 December 2004

cultural, intelligence, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, articl. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Cultural intelligence or cultural quotient CQ is the ability to relate and work effectively across cultures bearing similarity to the term cultural agility The term has been used in business education government and academic research contexts Originally the term cultural intelligence and the abbreviation CQ was developed in research by Christopher Earley 2002 and Earley and Soon Ang 2003 During the same period researchers David Thomas and Kerr Inkson worked on a complementary framework of CQ as well A few years later Ang Soon and Linn Van Dyne 1 worked on a scale development of the CQ construct as a research based way of measuring and predicting intercultural performance The term is relatively recent early definitions and studies of the concepts were given by P Christopher Earley 2 and Soon Ang in the book Cultural Intelligence Individual Interactions Across Cultures 2003 3 and more fully developed later by David Livermore in the book Leading with Cultural Intelligence The concept is related to that of cross cultural competence 4 However it goes beyond that to actually look at intercultural capabilities as a form of intelligence that can be measured and developed According to Earley Ang and Van Dyne cultural intelligence can be defined as a person s capability to adapt as she interacts with others from different cultural regions and has behavioral motivational and metacognitive aspects 5 Without cultural intelligence both business and military actors seeking to engage foreigners are susceptible to mirror imaging 6 Cultural intelligence CQ is measured on a scale similar to that used to measure an individual s intelligence quotient People with higher CQs are regarded as better able to successfully blend into any environment using more effective business practices than those with a lower CQ CQ is assessed using the academically validated assessment created by Linn Van Dyne and Soon Ang Both self assessments and multi rater assessments are available through the Cultural Intelligence Center in East Lansing Michigan and the Center makes the CQ Scale available to other academic researchers at no charge Research demonstrates that CQ is a consistent predictor of performance in multicultural settings Cultural intelligence research has been cited and peer reviewed in more than seventy academic journals 7 The research and application of cultural intelligence is being driven by the Cultural Intelligence Center in the U S and Nanyang Business School in Singapore Additional research and application of cultural intelligence has been conducted by Liliana Gil Valletta who holds the trademark 8 for the term since 2013 Defined as the ability to be aware of understand and apply cultural competence to everyday business decisions Gil Valletta has expanded the definition of cultural intelligence into a capability that yields a commercial advantage by turning cultural trends into profits and P amp L impact Since 2010 the firm CIEN and data science platform Culturintel is the first to use artificial intelligence and big data tools 9 to report measures of cultural intelligence and enable corporations to embed inclusion for business growth Contents 1 Four CQ capabilities 2 In business 3 In government 3 1 Diplomatic implications 4 In the U S military 4 1 Human Terrain System 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksFour CQ capabilities EditAng Van Dyne amp Livermore describe four CQ capabilities motivation CQ Drive cognition CQ Knowledge meta cognition CQ Strategy and behavior CQ Action CQ Assessments report scores on all four capabilities as well as several sub dimensions for each capability The four capabilities stem from the intelligence based approach to intercultural adjustment and performance 10 CQ DriveCQ Drive is a person s interest and confidence in functioning effectively in culturally diverse settings It includes Intrinsic interest deriving enjoyment from culturally diverse experiences Extrinsic interest gaining benefits from culturally diverse experiences Self efficacy having the confidence to be effective in culturally diverse situationsCQ KnowledgeCQ Knowledge is a person s knowledge about how cultures are similar and how cultures are different It includes Business knowledge about economic and legal systems Interpersonal knowledge about values social interaction norms and religious beliefs Socio linguistics knowledge about rules of languages and rules for expressing non verbal behaviorsCQ StrategyCQ Strategy is how a person makes sense of culturally diverse experiences It occurs when people make judgments about their own thought processes and those of others It includes Awareness knowing about one s existing cultural knowledge Planning strategizing before a culturally diverse encounter Checking checking assumptions and adjusting mental maps when actual experiences differ from expectations CQ ActionCQ Action is a person s capability to adapt verbal and nonverbal behavior to make it appropriate to diverse cultures It involves having a flexible repertoire of behavioral responses that suit a variety of situations It includes Non verbal modifying non verbal behaviors e g gestures facial expressions Verbal modifying verbal behaviors e g accent tone Additional research on cultural intelligence is being conducted by academics around the globe including research on culturally intelligent organizations the correlation between neuroscience and the development of cultural intelligence and situational judgment making and CQ Assessment In business EditCultural intelligence also known within business as cultural quotient or CQ is a theory within management and organisational psychology positing that understanding the impact of an individual s cultural background on their behaviour is essential for effective business and measuring an individual s ability to engage successfully in any environment or social setting 11 Elaine Mosakowski and her husband Christopher Earley in the October 2004 issue of Harvard Business Review described cultural intelligence CQ has been gaining acceptance throughout the business community CQ teaches strategies to improve cultural perception in order to distinguish behaviors driven by culture from those specific to an individual suggesting that allowing knowledge and appreciation of the difference to guide responses results in better business practice Since 2010 and as presented in academia national television and other industry forums Liliana Gil Valletta and the firm CIEN have expanded the definition and application of cultural intelligence from the individual to the organizational construct and architecture Their model allows corporations and business teams to assess their level of cultural intelligence excellence index Cix based on how well they integrate cross cultural analytics insights metrics rewards senior support R amp D and profit plans to make inclusion the default As defined by Gil Valletta traditional CQ focuses on achieving individual competence while Cix focuses on achieving commercial growth CQ is developed through cognitive means the head learning about your own and other cultures and cultural diversity physical means the body using your senses and adapting your movements and body language to blend in motivational means the emotions gaining rewards and strength from acceptance and success Ilan Alon Michele Boulange Judith Meyer and Vasyl Taras have developed a new survey they call the BCIQ Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient While not rooted in the academic literature on multiple loci of intelligence the survey provides practitioners with a tool to reflect on their understanding for use in an international management context 12 The only peer reviewed measurement of CQ is the multi rater assessment developed by Soon Ang and Linn Van Dyne In government EditCultural intelligence refers to the cognitive motivational and behavioral capacities to understand and effectively respond to the beliefs values attitudes and behaviors of individuals and groups under complex and changing circumstances in order to effect the desired change The application and integration of cultural intelligence into the workings and practices of local government is advanced by community planner Anindita Mitra in 2016 as a way to improve the effectiveness of local governments to respond to and serve a growing and diverse population 13 Cultural knowledge and warfare are bound together as cultural intelligence is central to ensuring successful military operations Culture is composed of factors including language society economy customs history and religion For military operations cultural intelligence concerns the ability to make decisions based on an understanding of these factors In the military sense cultural intelligence is a complicated pursuit of anthropology psychology communications sociology history and above all military doctrine Diplomatic implications Edit Diplomacy is the conduct by government officials of negotiations and other relations between nations The use of cultural intelligence and other methods of soft power has been endorsed and encouraged as a primary tool of statecraft as opposed to more coercive forms of national power its further development is being stressed as a primary exercise of power as opposed to the expensive politically and financial coercive options such as military action or economic sanctions For example in 2007 US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called for strengthening our capacity to use soft power and for better integrating it with hard power stating that using these other instruments could make it less likely that military force will have to be used in the first place as local problems might be dealt with before they become crises 14 In a speech in 2006 Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged similar actions in support of her doctrine of transformational diplomacy 15 she made a similar speech again in 2008 16 Governmental negotiation and other diplomatic efforts can be made much more effective if the knowledge of people is understood and practiced with skill Joseph Nye a leading political scientist asserts in his book Soft Power that a country may obtain the outcomes it wants in world politics because other countries admiring its values emulating its example aspiring to its level of prosperity and openness want to follow it In this sense it is also important to set the agenda and attract others in world politics and not only to force them to change by threatening military force or economic sanctions This soft power getting others to want the outcomes that you want co opts people rather than coerces them 17 The sorts of effects Nye describes are much more effective if there is a willingness on the part of the influencing agent to respect and understand the other agent s cultural background An example of diplomacy was a provision within the USA PATRIOT Act condemning discrimination against Arab and Muslim Americans response to the events of 9 11 18 This provision ensures the protection of U S Muslims and Arabs ensures a distinction between them and those that committed those terrorist acts and lives up to the ideals of the U S constitution of non discrimination This precedent sets up an attitude of awareness of and respect for peaceful law abiding Muslims However cultural intelligence can be used to the opposite effect In 2006 and 2007 Russian president Vladimir Putin supposedly used his knowledge of German chancellor Angela Merkel and her fear of dogs to intimidate her during negotiations by bringing his Labrador Retriever Koni 19 20 In the U S military EditCultural intelligence as a U S military term did not gain prominence until the late 20th century with the rise of low intensity and counterinsurgency warfare However the importance of cultural intelligence has only recently become commonly accepted with the counterinsurgency campaigns the U S has conducted in Afghanistan and Iraq 6 Since the Iraq War and the War in Afghanistan cultural intelligence has been seen as playing a more important role in the success of military operations in counterinsurgency The U S Army and Marine Corps counterinsurgency field manual is explicit on this point Cultural knowledge is essential to waging a successful counterinsurgency and goes further urging counterinsurgents should strive to avoid imposing their ideals of normalcy on a foreign cultural problem 21 The manual s logic is that the primary goal of any COIN operation is to foster the development of effective governance by a legitimate government 21 The manual points out that different cultures have different ideas of what legitimacy entails and that operations at building legitimacy need to meet the host nation s peoples criteria Failure to recognize and respect a host nation s culture has resulted in the deaths of some NATO troops and attempts have been made to make Afghans aware of Western culture and vice versa to mitigate some of these unintentional effects 22 Human Terrain System Edit To this effect the U S Army developed the Human Terrain System in February 2007 to provide cultural information of host nations The HTS program was the primary unified effort to provide this information to supplement military operations in areas where armed services were deployed The program was also controversial with the American Anthropological Association arguing that such efforts represented a conflict of interest and a possible violation of the ethical standards of anthropologists 23 but it was defended by others as ethical 24 The U S Army Human Terrain System ended operations in September 2014 See also EditCosmopolitanism Cultural anthropology Intercultural communication Intercultural competence Information warfare Intelligence cycle Organisational culture Psychological warfareReferences Edit Linn Van Dyne Archived from the original on 3 July 2016 Earley P Christopher Encyclopedia com Earley P 2003 Cultural intelligence individual interactions across cultures Stanford Calif Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4300 6 OCLC 51553576 Johnson James P Lenartowicz Tomasz Apud Salvador 2006 Cross Cultural Competence in International Business Toward a Definition and a Model Journal of International Business Studies 37 4 525 43 doi 10 1057 palgrave jibs 8400205 JSTOR 3875168 S2CID 28089540 Earley P Christopher 2002 Redefining interactions across cultures and organizations moving forward with cultural intelligence In B M Staw ed Research in Organizational Behavior Vol 24 R M Kramer Oxford Elsevier pp 271 99 a b Pilon Juliana 2009 Cultural Intelligence for Winning the Peace The Institute of World Politics Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 615 51939 5 Ang amp Van Dyne 2008 Handbook of Cultural Intelligence ME Sharpe CULTURAL INTELLIGENCE Trademark of XL ALLIANCE LLC Registration Number 4430285 Serial Number 85937282 Justia Trademarks Latino Group Bets on Big Data to Accelerate Diversity Across Silicon Valley Forbes Livermore David 2009 Leading with Cultural Intelligence New York AMACOM ISBN 978 0814449172 Alon Ilan Boulanger Michele Meyers Judith Taras Vasyl 1 January 2016 The development and validation of the Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient Cross Cultural amp Strategic Management 23 1 78 100 doi 10 1108 CCSM 10 2015 0138 ISSN 2059 5794 Alon I Boulanger M Meyers J Taras V 2016 The Development and validation of the Business Cultural Intelligence Quotient Cross Cultural amp Strategic Management Vol 23 Iss 1 pp 78 100 AWC gt Conference schedule Association of Washington Cities Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Speech www defense gov Retrieved 3 May 2023 Condoleezza Rice speech made a Georgetown University in 2006 available at http 2001 2009 state gov secretary rm 2006 59306 htm Transformational Diplomacy February 12 2008 C SPAN org www c span org Retrieved 3 May 2023 Nye Joseph Soft Power The Means to Success in World Politics New York Public Affairs 2004 UNITING AND STRENGTHENING AMERICA BY PROVIDING APPROPRIATE TOOLS REQUIRED TO INTERCEPT AND OBSTRUCT TERRORISM USA PATRIOT ACT ACT OF 2001 www govinfo gov Retrieved 3 May 2023 Foreign Policy Magazine Blog available at http blog foreignpolicy com posts 2007 06 14 putin uses dog to intimidate merkel Putin Merkel Summit Germany and Russia Try to Smooth Over Energy Tensions Der Spiegel 22 January 2007 ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 3 May 2023 a b FM 3 24 15DEC2006 3 24 COUNTERINSURGENCY everyspec com Retrieved 3 May 2023 Sieff Kevin Leiby Richard 28 September 2012 Afghan troops get a lesson in American cultural ignorance Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 3 May 2023 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2012 Retrieved 3 June 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Glenn David 3 December 2009 Military s Human Terrain Program Might Be Ethical Philosopher Says via The Chronicle of Higher Education Further reading EditEarley P Christopher Ang S 2003 Cultural intelligence individual interactions across cultures Stanford Calif Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4300 6 OCLC 51553576 Bhagat Rabi S 2006 Review of Earley and Ang Cultural Intelligence and Hooker Working Across Cultures Academy of Management Review 31 2 489 93 doi 10 5465 amr 2006 20208695 JSTOR 20159217 Ang S and Van Dyne L eds 2008 The Handbook of Cultural Intelligence New York ME Sharpe ISBN 9780765622624 Livermore David A 2011 The Cultural Intelligence Difference New York AMACOM ISBN 978 0814417065 Middleton Julia 2014 Cultural Intelligence CQ The Competitive Edge for Leaders Crossing Borders London A amp C Black Business Information and Development ISBN 978 1472904812External links EditHuffington Post Teaching Cultural Intelligence Could Provide Advantages In Job Market Forbes CQ The Test Of Your Potential For Cross Cultural Success Economist In Search of High CQ The Times Trend watch Cultural intelligence 2 December 2004 NBC s Education Nation CQ The New IQ for American Students Competing in a Global Marketplace Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cultural intelligence amp oldid 1152948050, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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