Contemporary political discourse often frames valued cultural characteristics as threatened by interaction with culturally distinct groups. This paper challenges this perspective by demonstrating how cross-cultural competence (CCC) can sustain cultural diversity, even in unequal societies. Using interview data from an Amazonian ethnic boundary, the author shows the prevalence of CCC and develops a mathematical model incorporating CCC and group identity valuation. The model reveals that disempowered minorities can maintain their cultural norms by learning the norms of the majority, counter-intuitively sustaining diversity. Valuation of a distinctive minority identity, rather than rejection of the majority culture, can characterize CCC individuals committed to mutually beneficial engagement within a multicultural society.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Oct 15, 2021
Authors
John A. Bunce
Tags
cross-cultural competence
cultural diversity
ethnic boundaries
mathematical model
cultural norms
minority identity
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