The Politics of Management Knowledge

Couverture
Professor Stewart R Clegg, Gill Palmer
SAGE, 16 sept. 1996 - 256 pages
The notion that management knowledge is universal, culture-neutral, readily transferable to any country or situation, has come under mounting challenge. The Politics of Management Knowledge goes beyond such broad-brush' assertions to explore in detail the relations between management knowledge, power and practice in a world where globalization highlights, rather than obscures, the locally specific character of many management recipes.

The book recognizes the political nature of management knowledge as a discourse produced from, and reproducing, power processes within and between organizations. This theme underpins discussion of the ways in which management ideas and practices produce' managers of a particular kind - person of enterprise, bureaucrat, heroic leader and so on. Critical examinations of certain current management theories - lean production, excellence, entrepreneurship - illuminate the myriad modes in which relations of power intermingle with relations of knowledge.

Eminent authors from a variety of countries address the social and political processes involved in cross-cultural transference of management ideas across the world. They also look to the future, stressing the need for a substantial new understanding that is less attuned to the corporate worlds of today and more appropriate for the increasingly diverse organizations likely to emerge in the twenty-first century.

 

Table des matières

Notes on Contributors vii ཌ
1
SelfImages of American
36
The Role of Social Identity in the International Transfer
46
Part Two Comparative Cultural Recipes for Management
69
The International Popularization of Entrepreneurial Ideas
80
Power Knowledge and Organizational
99
Francophone
121
Part Three The Future for Management
141
a Critique of Organizational Fashion
155
the Changing Roles and Knowledges
173
Innovation
190
Index
237
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