Cultural Adaptation
Definition:
A meta-competency enabling individuals to perform effectively across cross-cultural situations by drawing on a combination of natural aptitudes, motivation, and developed skills. Culturally agile individuals can move fluidly between cultural minimization — when cultural differences are appropriately set aside — cultural adaptation — when adjustment to the other’s norms is called for — and cultural integration — when a third, blended approach is most effective.
Comparable terms:
Cross-cultural adaptability (research — functional equivalent; emphasizes the adaptive dimension) · Cultural intelligence [CQ — Earley & Ang; related construct; emphasizes cognitive, motivational, and behavioral dimensions of cross-cultural effectiveness] · Intercultural competence (see separate entry — the developmental competence on which agility draws) · Cultural flexibility (HR/mobility — informal; less theoretically specific)
Sources:
Cultural agility is defined as the mega-competency that enables professionals to perform successfully in cross-cultural situations through a combination of natural abilities, motivation, and guided training, coaching, and development over time; Caligiuri presents a framework of twelve distinctive competencies organized along four dimensions as its foundation. Caligiuri, P. (2012). Cultural Agility: Building a Pipeline of Successful Global Professionals. Jossey-Bass.
Caligiuri, P. (2021). Build Your Cultural Agility: The Nine Competencies of Successful Global Professionals. Kogan Page. The updated and expanded framework, consolidating competencies and extending the model to include humility as the foundational attribute.
See also:
Intercultural Competence (Cultural Adaptation); Intercultural Sensitivity (Identity & Belonging); Expandable Worldview (Identity & Belonging). Cultural agility is the applied, behavioral expression of the intercultural sensitivity and global mindset described elsewhere in this vocabulary. Practitioners will find that the Caligiuri framework offers the most operationally specific model for assessing and developing cultural agility, while the Bennett DMIS — referenced in the intercultural competence and intercultural sensitivity entries — provides the developmental theory underpinning it.
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