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Sex and Culture Differences in Cultural Intelligence: A Study Comparing Saudi Arabians and Egyptians

Authors :
Adrian Furnham
Dimitri van der Linden
Salaheldin Farah Attallah Bakhiet
Khaled Elsayed Ziada
Edward Dutton
Shehana Mohammed Alqafari
Abdulrahman Saad Rashd Aljbr
Zohra Ihsan
Yossry Ahmed Sayed Essa
Daghaim Saud Alsahli
Nabil Sharaf Almalki
Work and Organizational Psychology
Source :
Sage Open, SAGE Open, Vol 11 (2021), SAGE Open, 11(3). SAGE Publishing
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Cultural Intelligence (CI) refers to the motivation and ability to understand and deal with cultural differences. As such, it is assumed to play a role in the effectiveness of social contact and communication between people from different cultures. Given its relevance to international relations, it is imperative to test which individual and group factors are associated with CI. Therefore, in the present study we examine cross-cultural and gender differences in CI. In one of their classes at their university, students ( N = 829) from Egypt and Saudi Arabia completed a multidimensional measure of CI. The results showed an interesting pattern of interactions between country and gender, which indicated that Egyptian men did not significantly differ from co-national women, but Saudi men scored significantly lower than women. We suggest that the different patterns of results in the two countries may partly arise from different levels of exposure to different cultures and partly from subtle differences in the constitution of the samples. Knowledge of individual and group differences in cultural intelligence may potentially contribute to explaining differential levels of success in individuals or countries in dealing with cultural differences.

Details

ISSN :
21582440
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SAGE Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a61bd54e792a531254d34d8c404cfe30
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211044177