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WiSe 2025/26

Global Business and Intercultural Management - Einzelansicht

  • Funktionen:
Grunddaten
Veranstaltungsart Seminar SWS 4
Veranstaltungsnummer 953002 Max. Teilnehmer/-innen 20
Semester WiSe 2025/26 Zugeordnetes Modul
Erwartete Teilnehmer/-innen
Rhythmus jedes 2. Semester
Hyperlink https://moodle.uni-weimar.de/course/view.php?id=54633
Sprache deutsch und englisch (zweisprachig)
Termine Gruppe: [unbenannt]
  Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Raum-
plan
Lehrperson Bemerkung fällt aus am Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Di. 10:00 bis 12:30 wöch. Marienstraße 7 B - Seminarraum 206      
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Di. 12:30 bis 13:15 wöch. Marienstraße 7 B - Seminarraum 206      
Gruppe [unbenannt]:
 
 


Zugeordnete Personen
Zugeordnete Personen Zuständigkeit
Seitz, Nikolaus, Jun.Prof., Dr.rer.pol. verantwortlich
Buratti, Martina , Dr.rer.pol. Master of Science begleitend
Bode, Birgit , Dipl.-Ing.
Studiengänge
Abschluss Studiengang Semester Leistungspunkte
M. Sc. Management [BII] (M.Sc.), PV2020 - 6
Leer Alle Studiengänge - 6
Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen
Fakultät Bau- und Umweltingenieurwissenschaften
Inhalt
Beschreibung

"Culture eats strategy for breakfast." – a quote often attributed to Peter Drucker, one of the most influential management thinkers and a pioneer of modern strategy – highlights a key insight that has become increasingly relevant in today’s globalized economy: cultural factors can determine the success or failure of strategies, organizations, and business outcomes. While traditional economics and management theory long focused on “hard” factors, it is now widely acknowledged that “softer” institutional and cultural dimensions play a decisive role in shaping business and project results.
In today’s world, where innovativeness increasingly emerges from cooperation and the power of interdisciplinarity, it is essential to understand the underlying mechanisms of culture and to develop the ability to navigate between different cultural mindsets. This applies not only to national or regional cultures but also to organizational values, workplace norms, and disciplinary ethics.
Intercultural differences profoundly influence management decisions, leadership styles, communication, and collaboration. They also play a decisive role in international management and corporate internationalization strategies. Successful market entries, cross-border mergers, and global project collaborations often depend less on the quality of the formal strategy than on the ability to understand and bridge cultural differences. Conversely, the neglect of cultural factors has led to the failure of numerous internationalization efforts, making intercultural competence a critical asset for global managers.
Beyond intercultural management, the course also explores how culture interacts with the broader field of international and global business management. Students will examine how cultural dynamics affect global supply chains, multinational organizational structures, cross-border leadership, and strategic alliances. They will learn to evaluate how global businesses design and implement strategies across diverse cultural and institutional environments, and how international competitiveness increasingly depends on the successful integration of cultural awareness with global business practices.
This course equips students with the ability to identify and understand intercultural challenges, sharpen their awareness of the significance of cultural aspects in global business, and develop practical skills to address intercultural dilemmas and tensions. Students will engage with both modern and well-established theories and methods of intercultural management and learn to apply these frameworks to practical problems faced by global managers.
By the end of the module, students will:
• Gain a comprehensive overview of the current state of intercultural management research.
• Develop the ability to critically evaluate theoretical and empirical studies in the field.
• Enhance their competence in managing diversity, interdisciplinarity, and complexity in global business environments.
• Strengthen their skills in navigating cultural challenges to improve business and project outcomes.
• Understand the cultural foundations of international management and assess their impact on effective internationalization strategies.
• Analyze how cultural and institutional factors shape global business management, from multinational organizations to international supply chains and alliances.

 

Bemerkung

Format:
The course combines weekly lectures (concepts, theories, frameworks) with interactive application sessions (case studies, group discussions, simulations) to bridge theory and practice.

Assessment:
The course is successfully completed by passing a written examination and frequent assigments in English.

Time and Place:
Tuesday, 10:00–11:30 & 11:45–13:15 (Room 206, Marienstraße 7B)

Leistungsnachweis

The course is successfully completed by passing a written examination and frequent assigments in English.

Zielgruppe

Die Veranstaltung steht als »Geöffneten Lehrveranstaltungen« allen Bachelor- und Masterstudierenden sowie Promovierenden der Fakultäten Architektur und Urbanistik, Bau- und Umweltingenieurwissenschaften, Kunst und Gestaltung sowie Medien im Rahmen des »Interdisziplinären Lehrangebots« offen. Bitte halten Sie vor der Anmeldung Rücksprache mit Ihrer Fachstudienberatung und klären Sie, ob diese Veranstaltung in ihrem Curriculum anerkannt werden kann. Bei Bedarf schließen Sie vor Veranstaltungsbeginn ein Learning Agreement (DE/EN) ab.


Strukturbaum
Die Veranstaltung wurde 4 mal im Vorlesungsverzeichnis WiSe 2025/26 gefunden:
Wahlpflichtmodule  - - - 3
Wahlmodule  - - - 4

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