The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship

This exploratory case study explores how executive coaches across Asia adapt coaching, from the conventional (essentially Western) understanding, to make it culturally congruent for their clients. It presents how coaching is personalized to an Eastern ethos; thus, constructively challenging coaching...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lina Nangalia, Ajay Nangalia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Brookes University 2010-02-01
Series:International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
Subjects:
Online Access:https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/cb7b963c-655d-430a-b13f-b001ed66dbdc/1/vol08issue1-paper-03.pdf
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spelling doaj-d6ea9ca0716f4a59991ae60ca8eef4242021-04-02T19:02:38ZengOxford Brookes UniversityInternational Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and MentoringXXXX-XXXX1741-83052010-02-01815166The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationshipLina Nangalia0Ajay Nangalia1Global Coach TrustCoach TrustThis exploratory case study explores how executive coaches across Asia adapt coaching, from the conventional (essentially Western) understanding, to make it culturally congruent for their clients. It presents how coaching is personalized to an Eastern ethos; thus, constructively challenging coaching concepts and practices that are believed to be universally applicable. The findings bring out how the deeply embedded concept of social hierarchy influences the role and status of the coach in Asian culture. Whether the social hierarchy draws its strength from Confucianism or the Hindu tradition, it shapes the expectations that clients have from the coach and coaching. International coaches working with Asian clients will appreciate that they need to flex their coaching style to suit the social context of their clients. A proposed framework can be used by international coaches working with Asian clients to understand what is required for cultural adaptation.https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/cb7b963c-655d-430a-b13f-b001ed66dbdc/1/vol08issue1-paper-03.pdfCross-cultural coachingAsian cultureSocial HierarchyConfucianismIndian culture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lina Nangalia
Ajay Nangalia
spellingShingle Lina Nangalia
Ajay Nangalia
The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
Cross-cultural coaching
Asian culture
Social Hierarchy
Confucianism
Indian culture
author_facet Lina Nangalia
Ajay Nangalia
author_sort Lina Nangalia
title The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
title_short The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
title_full The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
title_fullStr The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
title_full_unstemmed The Coach in Asian Society: Impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
title_sort coach in asian society: impact of social hierarchy on the coaching relationship
publisher Oxford Brookes University
series International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
issn XXXX-XXXX
1741-8305
publishDate 2010-02-01
description This exploratory case study explores how executive coaches across Asia adapt coaching, from the conventional (essentially Western) understanding, to make it culturally congruent for their clients. It presents how coaching is personalized to an Eastern ethos; thus, constructively challenging coaching concepts and practices that are believed to be universally applicable. The findings bring out how the deeply embedded concept of social hierarchy influences the role and status of the coach in Asian culture. Whether the social hierarchy draws its strength from Confucianism or the Hindu tradition, it shapes the expectations that clients have from the coach and coaching. International coaches working with Asian clients will appreciate that they need to flex their coaching style to suit the social context of their clients. A proposed framework can be used by international coaches working with Asian clients to understand what is required for cultural adaptation.
topic Cross-cultural coaching
Asian culture
Social Hierarchy
Confucianism
Indian culture
url https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/cb7b963c-655d-430a-b13f-b001ed66dbdc/1/vol08issue1-paper-03.pdf
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