#3369. Cross-National Comparison of Breastfeeding, Malnutrition and Associated Risk Factors among Mexican-Origin Children Living in Mexico and the US

July 2026publication date
Proposal available till 23-05-2025
4 total number of authors per manuscript5500 $

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Journal’s subject area:
Cultural Studies
Sociology
Management
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Abstract:
Meeting lateness can be viewed as a disruption to the temporal pacing of work. Empirical insights concerning the extent to which experiences of meeting lateness are similar or different across different cultures remain sparse. While prior work suggests differences in how individuals from different cultures experience time-related phenomena, globalization trends suggest increasing similarities in employees’ work experiences, and potentially similar experiences of meeting lateness across different cultural settings. We empirically establish the cross-cultural relevance of meeting lateness and their generally negative outcome. We show how meeting lateness relates to perceptions of impaired meeting processes, meeting outcomes, and group-related attitudes across cultures. We discuss these findings in light of extending meeting science to different cultures as well as contributions to the debate between cross-cultural differences versus globalization tendencies.
Keywords:
Meeting lateness; different cultures; meeting processes; cross-cultural differences

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