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Dear Nnamdi,

 

Your questions were intriguing so I had to put aside my work and
investigate, since as you mentioned Griffin and Pustay is one of the more
established textbooks in the market.

 

So, here are a few clarifications to assist your students:



1)      I don't know how the Global Edition was printed, but in the US
Edition, there is a direct reference to the Ronen and Shenkar (1985)
article, right below the map. So, I think, if there is an error there, it
was a printing error by the publisher and not an intended omission by the
authors.  This is not surprising, since in textbook publishing these days,
copyright and permissions are quite carefully monitored, so I would have
found it hard to believe that something like that could have sneaked
through, especially in an established textbook.



2)      One of the things I always teach my students is that, if there is
something they question in a book or article, to always seek out the
original citation and look at the original work to see if the peculiarities
have been addressed.  So, I went and looked at the Ronen and Shenkar
article, which actually reviews  several other articles to put together the
clusters.  Specifically, the "Arab" cluster comes from Badawy 1979 which is
an Academy of Management Conference Proceedings article.  I did manage to
download that article as well and the data comes from a survey of Middle
Eastern executives that were attending an executive development program in
1978. 

 

So, that partially explains a few things:  

(a) Qatar was omitted because there were probably no executives from Qatar
at the executive development program where the survey was conducted. In
addition, if you look at that map, it's not a comprehensive analysis. Only
47 countries are marked on the map, which means over 150 countries are
missing from the analysis, in addition to Qatar. So there is no conspiracy
to exclude Qatar. 

 

(b) The original 1979 article also includes both Abu Dhabi and United Arab
Emirates on the list.  I'm going to assume these were self-reported by the
managers that were surveyed. I'm not an expert in UAE history, but I know
that the emirates joined together in 1971 so it would not be surprising that
some managers still felt a stronger affiliation with Abu Dhabi than with the
UAE only eight years later.  The author of the original study could have
corrected this, but probably chose to report it exactly as the managers did.

 

 

So, I don't think there is any huge error or mistake in the map.  But, I
would question the utility of using that map in an 2013 book, when the map
was first published in 1985, and most of the analysis was done back in the
late 1970s.  Surely there has been much more insightful research published
in IB literature in the 30 years since that article that could have be of
higher benefit to the students.

 

Best Regards,

 

Tunga

---

Tunga Kiyak

Michigan State University 

  _____  

From: Nnamdi Madichie <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 15, 2013 1:57 PM
Subject: [AIB-L] Griffin & Pustay

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

I was going to use the subject "Just when you thought they weren't paying
attention," but decided against it.

 

My normally detached students have brought up, at different times in the
last week, some serious flaw in what many see as a key IB text - i.e.
Griffin, R., and Pustay, M. (2013) International Business. Harlow, England:
Pearson. Global Edition.  

 

The key contention relates to Map 4.4 entitled "A synthesis of country
clusters" (see p. 126) where Arab Clusters included both Abu Dhabi and the
United Arab Emirates. Surprise, surprise, Qatar was clearly left out. 

 

Just after class today, another student suggested that Griffin and Pustay
might have lifted the clustering without checking the facts, from Ronen and
Shenkar (1985) paper in the Academy of Management Review, Vol. 10(3) where
upon checking this out I quite agreed because the evidence is on p. 445 of
this seminal article.

 

I need to get back to my students after your responses have been received.

 

Cheers,

Nnamdi

 


_________________________________________________________________
"Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will
always glorify the hunter" - Achebe (R.I.P.)
Read my papers for free:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=962279

 

 

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