Summary
Contents
Subject index
"Barry and Hansen have gathered an impressive array of contributors to speculate where the management and organization field might be headed. The Handbook offers refreshing and proactive insights that confront our assumptions about organizations and challenge us to expand our thinking and inquiry. It it must reading for anyone who seeks to understand how we look at, live in, and act on organizations."—Thomas G. Cummings, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern CaliforniaTen years ago critical theory and postmodernism were considered new and emerging theories in Business and Management. What will be the next new important theories to shape the field? In one edited volume, David Barry and Hans Hansen have commissioned new chapters that will allow readers to stay one step ahead of the latest thinking. Contributors draw on research and practice to introduce ideas that are considered 'fringe' and controversial today, but may be key theoretical contributions tomorrow. Each chapter sets these ideas in their historical context, lays out the key theoretical positions taken by each new approach and makes it clear why these approaches are different to more mainstream concepts. Throughout contributors refer to existing studies that show how these developing themes will change the Business and Management arena.Researchers, teachers and advanced students who are interested in the future of Business and Management scholarship will want to read this Handbook.
Statistico-organizational Theory: Creating Organizational Management Theory from Methodological Principles
Statistico-organizational Theory: Creating Organizational Management Theory from Methodological Principles
This chapter briefly presents a new organizational management theory: statistico-organizational theory. Its central idea is to use methodological principles to drive substantive theory about organizations and managers. Thus, the theory attempts a highly unusual crossover between the domains of methodology and theory, in which methodology becomes the theory. In this way, statistico-organizational theory is a high-water mark in the positivist agenda. Methodology offers a highly developed intellectual apparatus that compares favourably with existing substantive theories of organization and management. Many working organizational and management researchers are committed to these principles, using them as the arbiters to accept or reject substantive theories as being true or false. Thus, given ...
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