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Redesigning Management Education and Research
Challenging Proposals from European Scholars
9780857933584 Edward Elgar Publishing
The field of management education and research has become an industry of its own – an industry with fierce international competition in a global arena. Here, the authors argue that a series of mechanisms has led to mimicking and thus strategic convergence among business schools. The authors further argue that this has resulted in a loss of relevance and diversity of the management knowledge produced and taught in a multipolar world. They view this as counterproductive to business schools, students, firms, societies and other stakeholders, including scholars themselves.
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Contributors
Contents
More Information
The field of management education and research has become an industry of its own – an industry with fierce international competition in a global arena. Here, the authors argue that a series of mechanisms has led to mimicking and thus strategic convergence among business schools. The authors further argue that this has resulted in a loss of relevance and diversity of the management knowledge produced and taught in a multipolar world. They view this as counterproductive to business schools, students, firms, societies and other stakeholders, including scholars themselves.
Based in part on the work of SFM (Société Française de Management – the French Academy of Management), the authors of this volume endeavour to engage in strategic conversations with stakeholders in an effort to reshape the field of management studies. Redesigning Management Education and Research revisits the foundations of management research and education, suggests ways to redesign the content taught to better fit the needs of firms and society at large, and proposes actions and concrete examples of what could be done to restructure the institutional setting of the field of management. This book calls for collective strategies from management scholars to influence some of the de facto regulation mechanisms that have appeared over recent years, such as business school rankings and the race for publication in a narrow list of academic journals. This book is also a plea for working on those issues beyond the specificities of national contexts to encompass a broader regional perspective in order to reshape the rules of the game in management education and research.
Teachers, researchers and deans, as well as practitioners from all areas of business will find this volume illuminating. It offers an ambitious vision and a practical framework aimed squarely at remaking management education and research to be relevant to the demands of the twenty-first century.
Based in part on the work of SFM (Société Française de Management – the French Academy of Management), the authors of this volume endeavour to engage in strategic conversations with stakeholders in an effort to reshape the field of management studies. Redesigning Management Education and Research revisits the foundations of management research and education, suggests ways to redesign the content taught to better fit the needs of firms and society at large, and proposes actions and concrete examples of what could be done to restructure the institutional setting of the field of management. This book calls for collective strategies from management scholars to influence some of the de facto regulation mechanisms that have appeared over recent years, such as business school rankings and the race for publication in a narrow list of academic journals. This book is also a plea for working on those issues beyond the specificities of national contexts to encompass a broader regional perspective in order to reshape the rules of the game in management education and research.
Teachers, researchers and deans, as well as practitioners from all areas of business will find this volume illuminating. It offers an ambitious vision and a practical framework aimed squarely at remaking management education and research to be relevant to the demands of the twenty-first century.
Contributors
Contributors: O. Basso, P.-J. Benghozi, J. Brabet, E. Cornuel, S. Dameron, B. de Montmorillon, P.P. Dornier, T. Durand, E. Godelier, A. Hatchuel, R. Laufer, A.C. Martinet, P. McKiernan, J.-P. Mounier, M.A. Payaud, R. Pérez, D. Tourish
Contents
Contents:
Preface
Introduction: The Story in Short
PART I: REVISITING THE FOUNDATIONS OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
1. Social Sciences and Management Sciences: Convergences or Divergences?
Eric Godelier
2. Proposition for a Comparative History of Education in Law and Management: About the Notion of Jurisprudence
Romain Laufer
3. Management as a Basic Academic Field: Foundation, Roots and Identity
Armand Hatchuel
PART II: REDESIGNING THE CONTENTS OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
4. To What Extent is Management Research Legitimate?
Roland Pérez
5. Redesigning Business Management Education: Functional Silos versus Cross-functional Views – A Historical and Social Perspective
Bernard de Montmorillon
6. Building More Sustainable and Responsible Firms: Proposals for a Science of Acceptable Design
Alain Charles Martinet and Marielle Audrey Payaud
7. Relevance and Irrelevance of Management Research: Some European Hope
Peter McKiernan
PART III: REDESIGNING THE INSTITUTIONAL SETTING OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
8. Evaluating Management Education and Business Schools in Context
Olivier Basso, Philippe-Pierre Dornier and Jean-Paul Mounier
9. Evaluating Programmes of Management Education: The EFMD Perspective
Eric Cornuel
10. Performativity, Metatheorising and Journal Rankings: What are the Implications for Emerging Journals and Academic Freedom?
Dennis Tourish
PART IV: HOW TO PROCEED FROM HERE? ILLUSTRATION WITH TWO SFM POSITION PAPERS
11. What About Books in the Evaluation Process?
Julienne Brabet and Thomas Durand
12. Journals and Journal Rankings
Pierre-Jean Benghozi
Index
Preface
Introduction: The Story in Short
PART I: REVISITING THE FOUNDATIONS OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
1. Social Sciences and Management Sciences: Convergences or Divergences?
Eric Godelier
2. Proposition for a Comparative History of Education in Law and Management: About the Notion of Jurisprudence
Romain Laufer
3. Management as a Basic Academic Field: Foundation, Roots and Identity
Armand Hatchuel
PART II: REDESIGNING THE CONTENTS OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
4. To What Extent is Management Research Legitimate?
Roland Pérez
5. Redesigning Business Management Education: Functional Silos versus Cross-functional Views – A Historical and Social Perspective
Bernard de Montmorillon
6. Building More Sustainable and Responsible Firms: Proposals for a Science of Acceptable Design
Alain Charles Martinet and Marielle Audrey Payaud
7. Relevance and Irrelevance of Management Research: Some European Hope
Peter McKiernan
PART III: REDESIGNING THE INSTITUTIONAL SETTING OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
8. Evaluating Management Education and Business Schools in Context
Olivier Basso, Philippe-Pierre Dornier and Jean-Paul Mounier
9. Evaluating Programmes of Management Education: The EFMD Perspective
Eric Cornuel
10. Performativity, Metatheorising and Journal Rankings: What are the Implications for Emerging Journals and Academic Freedom?
Dennis Tourish
PART IV: HOW TO PROCEED FROM HERE? ILLUSTRATION WITH TWO SFM POSITION PAPERS
11. What About Books in the Evaluation Process?
Julienne Brabet and Thomas Durand
12. Journals and Journal Rankings
Pierre-Jean Benghozi
Index