The Routledge Companion to Critical Management Studies (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Prasad, Anshuman; Helms Mills, Jean; Mills, Albert; Prasad, Pushkala
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The Routledge Companion to Critical Management Studies (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Prasad, Anshuman; Helms Mills, Jean; Mills, Albert; Prasad, Pushkala
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The birth of critical management studies (CMS) followed a period of strict orthodoxy in management thinking, with CMS challenging the established order. However, the explosive growth in new management ideas over time has meant that CMS itself has sometimes struggled to keep up. The Routledge Companion to Critical Management Studies captures today's revived spirit and thinking within CMS, and showcases the pluralistic generation of CMS scholars that has emerged in recent years.
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 442
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. August 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134511235
- Artikelnr.: 43665841
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 442
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. August 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134511235
- Artikelnr.: 43665841
Studies in a Changing World (Anshuman Prasad, Pushkala Prasad, Albert J.
Mills and Jean Helms Mills) Part II: Critique and its (Dis-) Contents 2.
Critical Management Scholarship: A Satirical Critique of Three Narrative
Histories (Albert J. Mills and Jean Helms Mills) 3. An Ethic of Care within
Critical Management Studies? (Emma Bell, Susan Meriläinen, Scott Taylor and
Janne Tienari) 4. Critical Performativity: The Happy End of Critical
Management Studies? (Sverre Spoelstra and Peter Svensson) 5. A Rebel
without a Cause? (Re)Claiming the Question of The 'Political' in Critical
Management Studies (Ajnesh Prasad) Part III: Difference, Otherness,
Marginality 6. Fringe Benefits? Revisi(ti)ng the Relationship between
Feminism and Critical Management Studies (Karen Lee Ashcraft) 7. Humility
and the Challenge to De-Colonize the 'Critical' in Critical Management
Studies (Janet L. Borgerson) 8: Sexualities and/in 'Critical' Management
Studies (Jeff Hearn, Charlotte Holgersson and Marjut Jyrkinen) 9. Power
Failure: The Short Life and Premature Death of Critical 'Diversity'
Research (Roy Jacques) Part IV: Knowledge at the Crossroads 10. Towards
Decolonizing Modern Western Structures of Knowledge: A Postcolonial
Interrogation of (Critical) Management Studies (Anshuman Prasad) 11.
Debating Critical Management Studies and Global Management Knowledge (
Gavin Jack) 12. Rethinking Market-ing Orientation: A Critical
Perspective From an Emerging Economy (Alexandre Faria) 13. Social Movements
and Organizations through a Critical Management Studies Lens: Metaphor,
Mechanism, Mobilization, or More? (Maureen Scully) 14. The Usual Suspects?
Putting Plagiarism 2.0 in its Place (J. Michael Cavanaugh) 15. Teaching
Management Critically: Classroom Practices under Rival Paradigms (Gabriela
Coronado) Part V: History and Discourse 16: History of-in-and Critical
Management Studies (Terrance Weatherbee) 17. Let them Eat Ethics: Hiding
behind Corporate Social Responsibility in the Age of Financialization (
Richard Marens) 18. Towards a Genealogy of Humanitarianism:Revealing (Neo-)
Colonialism in Organizational Practice (Adam Rostis) 19. Deconstructive
Criticism and Critical Management Studies (Steve McKenna and Amanda
Peticca-Harris) Part VI: Global Predicaments 20: The 'Iron' in the Iron
Cage: Retheorizing the Multinational Corporation as a Colonial Space (Raza
Mir and Ali Mir) 21: "We're not talking to people, we're talking to a
nation:" Crossing Borders in Transnational Customer Service Work (Kiran
Mirchandani) 22. Microfinance: A Neoliberal Instrument or a Site of the
'Other's' Resistance and Contestation? (Nimruji Jammulamadaka) 23.
Exceptional Opportunities: Hierarchies of Race and Nation in the United
States Peace Corps Recruitment Materials (Jenna N. Hanchey) 24. American
Soft Imperialism and Management Education in Brazil: A Postcolonial
Critique (Rafael Alcadipani)
Studies in a Changing World (Anshuman Prasad, Pushkala Prasad, Albert J.
Mills and Jean Helms Mills) Part II: Critique and its (Dis-) Contents 2.
Critical Management Scholarship: A Satirical Critique of Three Narrative
Histories (Albert J. Mills and Jean Helms Mills) 3. An Ethic of Care within
Critical Management Studies? (Emma Bell, Susan Meriläinen, Scott Taylor and
Janne Tienari) 4. Critical Performativity: The Happy End of Critical
Management Studies? (Sverre Spoelstra and Peter Svensson) 5. A Rebel
without a Cause? (Re)Claiming the Question of The 'Political' in Critical
Management Studies (Ajnesh Prasad) Part III: Difference, Otherness,
Marginality 6. Fringe Benefits? Revisi(ti)ng the Relationship between
Feminism and Critical Management Studies (Karen Lee Ashcraft) 7. Humility
and the Challenge to De-Colonize the 'Critical' in Critical Management
Studies (Janet L. Borgerson) 8: Sexualities and/in 'Critical' Management
Studies (Jeff Hearn, Charlotte Holgersson and Marjut Jyrkinen) 9. Power
Failure: The Short Life and Premature Death of Critical 'Diversity'
Research (Roy Jacques) Part IV: Knowledge at the Crossroads 10. Towards
Decolonizing Modern Western Structures of Knowledge: A Postcolonial
Interrogation of (Critical) Management Studies (Anshuman Prasad) 11.
Debating Critical Management Studies and Global Management Knowledge (
Gavin Jack) 12. Rethinking Market-ing Orientation: A Critical
Perspective From an Emerging Economy (Alexandre Faria) 13. Social Movements
and Organizations through a Critical Management Studies Lens: Metaphor,
Mechanism, Mobilization, or More? (Maureen Scully) 14. The Usual Suspects?
Putting Plagiarism 2.0 in its Place (J. Michael Cavanaugh) 15. Teaching
Management Critically: Classroom Practices under Rival Paradigms (Gabriela
Coronado) Part V: History and Discourse 16: History of-in-and Critical
Management Studies (Terrance Weatherbee) 17. Let them Eat Ethics: Hiding
behind Corporate Social Responsibility in the Age of Financialization (
Richard Marens) 18. Towards a Genealogy of Humanitarianism:Revealing (Neo-)
Colonialism in Organizational Practice (Adam Rostis) 19. Deconstructive
Criticism and Critical Management Studies (Steve McKenna and Amanda
Peticca-Harris) Part VI: Global Predicaments 20: The 'Iron' in the Iron
Cage: Retheorizing the Multinational Corporation as a Colonial Space (Raza
Mir and Ali Mir) 21: "We're not talking to people, we're talking to a
nation:" Crossing Borders in Transnational Customer Service Work (Kiran
Mirchandani) 22. Microfinance: A Neoliberal Instrument or a Site of the
'Other's' Resistance and Contestation? (Nimruji Jammulamadaka) 23.
Exceptional Opportunities: Hierarchies of Race and Nation in the United
States Peace Corps Recruitment Materials (Jenna N. Hanchey) 24. American
Soft Imperialism and Management Education in Brazil: A Postcolonial
Critique (Rafael Alcadipani)