(IMOA) Imagine Pacific Original Article
Crescendo Clashing and Pacific Global Innovation
By James E. Faumuina, MBA, MPA
Editor, Imagine Pacific Pulse
7/6/2024
Cumberland et al. (2016) referred in their literature review to using a cultural assimilation mechanism to predict clashing behaviors (p. 309). Although cultural awareness is approached, there is further opportunity to investigate the rationale behind the clashing cultures of global leaders.
Contrary to the assertion that individual capacity depends on basic skills acquired through human resource development (Cumberland et al., 2016), Mao et al. (2024) provide the context that regional culture also influences human capacity, contending that inherent capabilities born of the cultural regions, such as regional innovation, play a role in shaping “values, behaviors, norms, and regional identity” (p. 24).
Cumberland et al.'s (2016) view of culture faces challenges with the emphasis on individualism in Pacific culture (Tiatia-Seath et al., 2020), in addition to what Mao et al. (2024) provided as a necessary tenet of regional culture. Cumberland et al.'s reference to cross-cultural training as a low-contact activity underappreciates Pacific culture but also presents an opportunity to be enlightened. Here, Tiatia-Seath et al. illustrate another layer of regional culture with their use of the sense of place to describe communal identity (p. 402). Through the literature, the authors capture how Pacific Islanders' perspective of what Cumberland et al. espoused as culture may be considered colonialism by those who have undergone the experience of Western cultural assimilation (Tiatia-Seath et al., 2020).
The clash heard is a crescendo awakening in the Pacific. Innovation is here and has been for millennia. A sense of place, indigeneity, and cultural practice require assimilation; however, the direction is prime to change course from West to the Pacific, not the other way around, as global literature tendencies have been conditioned to lean.
James is the owner of Imagine Pacific Enterprises and the Editor of Imagine Pacific Pulse (IMPULSE). He is a retired Lt Col, Hawaii Air National Guard. Former medical administrator, planner, program manager, and operations officer. Graduated from the USAF Air War College and is currently a Ph.D. student in the in Troy Global Leadership Program. He can be contacted at jfaumuina@troy.edu or Administrator@Imagine-Pacific.com