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Conflict or Culture Clash? How Inclusive Leaders Navigate Difference

Have you ever been in a meeting where someone’s direct feedback felt jarring, or someone else’s silence was misunderstood?

In diverse teams, not all tension is about personality or performance. Sometimes, it’s cultural.

Conflict can often be traced back to unspoken differences, how we give feedback, make decisions, manage time, or handle disagreement. What seems ‘normal’ in one culture may feel uncomfortable or even disrespectful in another.

Inclusive leaders know this. They have the cultural intelligence to pause, reflect, and ask: could this be a difference in expectations rather than intent?

Rather than avoiding conflict or rushing to fix it, inclusive leaders take time to understand. They ask open questions, listen carefully, and help others reflect. They model curiosity in place of judgement. And they actively support their teams to repair ruptures, not just reach agreement.

For example, in one global project team, a leader noticed rising tension between two engineers: one from a culture that valued directness, the other from one that prized harmony. By recognising these underlying dynamics and opening a conversation about communication preferences, the leader helped the team realign.

Inclusive leadership is not about removing all tension. It’s about navigating it with awareness and empathy.

This kind of leadership doesn’t happen by accident. It requires intention, reflection, and practice.

Blogs

Rethinking meetings as spaces for inclusion

A 2026 review by Rogelberg and colleagues, synthesises thirty years of research on meeting science and offers a compelling insight. Meetings are not simply operational necessities, they are one of the most influential, and often overlooked, mechanisms through which inclusion is experienced at work....
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Blogs

Not all expertise is what it seems

A recent paper by Mergen and colleagues (2026), published in Organization, introduces a powerful and timely concept: toxic experts. These are individuals who, despite appearing credible, use their perceived expertise to promote misleading or harmful claims, often for personal or commercial gain....
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Blogs

How everyday interactions shape dignity at work

Dignity is not only lost in dramatic moments. It can also be eroded quietly, in everyday interactions that signal who is valued, and who is not. A recent study by Gatwiri and Kim (2026), published in the Australian Journal of Social Issues, offers a powerful lens on this....
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