Why Bilingual and Bicultural Leaders Abroad Must Learn Cultural Relativism
Bilingual and bicultural leaders are often seen as natural bridges between worlds. They speak the language. They know the customs. They move fluidly across borders. But fluency alone is not enough. Without cultural relativism, even the most linguistically gifted leader can misread the room. What’s at Stake When bilingual leaders work abroad, they often assume they “get it.” But knowing how to say something doesn’t mean knowing why it’s said that way—or what it means in context. Cultural relativism teaches leaders to pause, interpret, and resist the urge to judge through a home-culture lens. Why It Matters Prevents ethnocentric drift Even bicultural leaders can default to home-culture assumptions under stress. Cultural relativism interrupts that reflex. Deepens trust Local teams feel seen when leaders interpret behavior through local logic—not foreign critique. Improves decision-making Relativistic leaders ask: “What does this mean here ?” before acting. That leads to ...