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  • Format: ePub

Using historical examples grounded in the framework supplied by the social theorist Margaret Archer, this book provides a new perspective on institutional logics. Challenging conceptualizations of the key areas of social life that frame and condition organizational action, the book provides examples from spheres such as play and the military.

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Produktbeschreibung
Using historical examples grounded in the framework supplied by the social theorist Margaret Archer, this book provides a new perspective on institutional logics. Challenging conceptualizations of the key areas of social life that frame and condition organizational action, the book provides examples from spheres such as play and the military.


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Autorenporträt
Alistair Mutch is Professor of Information and Learning at Nottingham Trent University. He has published widely on organisation theory and history. Educated at secondary level in both England and Scotland, he obtained a joint honours LLB in jurisprudence and history from the University of Dundee in 1976. Exposure to the distinctive educational, religious and legal traditions of Scotland, which has continued to influence his later work, was followed by the study of history at the University of Manchester, from where he obtained both an MA and a PhD, the latter being for a study of the nineteenth century rural history of Lancashire. Following ten years' experience as an accountant with British Telecom, he joined NTU in 1990, where he has worked ever since. His Religion and National Identity: Governing the Church of Scotland in the Eighteenth Century (Edinburgh, 2015) brought a novel and innovative approach to the study of religious governance practices, one that has implications for the study of the relationship between religion and economic activity.