Title: The effects of cultural intelligence, psychological safety, and teamwork climate on conflict frequency in global virtual teams
Authors: David S. Baker; Zandra Balbinot; Eric David Cohen; Fred Omondi Newa; Vasyl Taras
Addresses: Moody College of Business, The University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, Louisiana, USA ' Université du Québec á Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada ' State University of Campinas, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil ' United States International University-Africa, Nairobi, Kenya ' Bryan School of Business and Economics, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA
Abstract: This research investigates culturally sensitive management strategies to improve Global Virtual Team (GVT) performance. The purpose is to assess the relationships between four discriminate sub-dimensions of CQ, psychological safety, work climate and frequency of conflict in GVTs. It tests whether cognitive, metacognitive, motivational and/or behavioural CQ differently predict individual psychological safety, which will, in turn, affect GVT work climate and conflict frequency in multicultural GVTs. Importantly, the results of this research imply that cross-cultural awareness is often more important than any specific individual cultural knowledge (i.e., cognitive CQ). Findings identified the strong significance of motivational CQ and moderate significance of meta-cognitive cultural intelligence as antecedents to perceived psychological safety, positive work climate and reduction of perceived frequency of conflict in GVTs. Results did not show significant effects for cognitive CQ and behavioural CQ.
Keywords: export intensity; agglomeration; innovation; domestic versus foreign.
European Journal of International Management, 2025 Vol.26 No.3/4, pp.679 - 698
Received: 08 Nov 2020
Accepted: 21 Apr 2021
Published online: 23 Jun 2025 *