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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Paul S. Adler (, Professor of Management and Organization, University of Southern California)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 25.20cm Weight: 1.219kg ISBN: 9780199535231ISBN 10: 019953523 Pages: 700 Publication Date: 26 March 2009 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsPart I: The Role of the Classics 1: Paul Adler: Introduction: TA Social Science which Forgets its Founders is Lost 2: Patricia H. Thornton: The Value of the Classics Part II: European Perspectives 3: Richard Swedburg: Tocqueville as a Pioneer in Organization Theory 4: Paul Adler: Marx and Organization Studies Today 5: Richard Marens: It's Not Just for Communists any More: Marxian Political-Economy and Organizational Theory 6: Stewart Clegg and Michael Lounsbury: Sintering the Iron Cage: Translation, Domination, and Rationality 7: Paul du Gay: Max Weber and the Ethics of Office 8: Pamela Tolbert and Shon Hiatt: On Organizations and Oligarchies: Michels in 21st Century 9: Frank Dobbin: How Durkheim's Theory of Meaning-Making Influenced Organizational Sociology 10: Paul Hirsch, Peer Fiss, and Amanda Hoel-Green: A Durkheimian Approach to Globalization 11: Barbara Czarniawska: Gabriel Tarde and Organization Theory 12: Alan Scott: Georg Simmel: The Individual and the Organization 13: Rosabeth Moss Kanter and Rakesh Khurana: Types and Positions: The Significance of Georg Simmel's Structural Theories for Organizational Behavior 14: Markus C. Becker and Thorbjørn Knudsen: Schumpeter and the Organization of Entrepreneurship 15: Ad van Iterson: Norbert Elias's Impact on Organization Studies Part III: American Perspectives 16: Gary Hamilton and Misha Petrovic: Thorstein Veblen and the Organization of the Capitalist Economy 17: Stella M. Nkomo: The Sociology of Race: The Contributions of W. E. B. Du Bois 18: Andrew Abbott: Organizations and the Chicago School 19: Arne Carlsen: After James on Identity 20: Michael Cohen: Reading Dewey: Some Implications for the Study of Routine 21: Chris Ansell: Mary Parker Follett and Pragmatist Organization 22: Tim Hallett, David Shulman, and Gary Alan Fine: Peopling Organizations: The Promise of Classic Symbolic Interactionism for an Inhabited Institutionalism 23: Andrew Van de Ven and Arik Lifschitz: John R. Commons: Back to the Future of Organization Studies 24: Elisabeth S. Clemens: The Problem of the Corporation: Liberalism and the Large Organization 25: Mike Reed: Bureaucratic Theory and Intellectual Renewal in Contemporary Organization Studies 26: Heather Haveman: The Columbia School and the Study of Organizations: Why Organizations Have Lives of Their Own 27: Charles Heckscher: Parsons as an Organization Theorist Part IV: Afterword 28: Gerald Davis and Meyer Zald: Afterword: Sociological Classics and the Canon in the Study of OrganizationsReviewsprovides excellent supplemental reading to original works of Karl Marx, Max Weber, Thorstein Veblen, and other notables within this field of research. Summing up: Recommended. * L. L. Hansen, University of Massachusetts, Boston * provides excellent supplemental reading to original works of Karl Marx, Max Weber, Thorstein Veblen, and other notables within this field of research. Summing up: Recommended. L. L. Hansen, University of Massachusetts, Boston provides excellent supplemental reading to orginal works of Karl Marx, Max Weber, Thorstein Veblen, and other notables within this field of research. Summing up: Recommended. L. L. Hansen, University of Massachusetts, Boston provides excellent supplemental reading to original works of Karl Marx, Max Weber, Thorstein Veblen, and other notables within this field of research. Summing up: Recommended. L. L. Hansen, University of Massachusetts, Boston Author InformationProfessor Adler began his education in Australia and moved to France in 1974. He received his doctorate in economics and management there while working as a Research Economist for the French government. He came to the USA in 1981, and before arriving at USC in 1991, he was affiliated with the Brookings Institution, Columbia University, the Harvard Business School, and Stanford's School of Engineering. His research and teaching focus on organization theory and design in R&D, engineering, software, healthcare, and manufacturing operations. He has served as chair of the Technology and Innovation Management Division and the Critical Management Studies Interest Group of the Academy of Management, and he has published widely in academic and managerial journals both in the U.S. and overseas. His most recent book was The Firm as a Collaborative Community: Reconstructing Trust in the Knowledge Economy (OUP, 2006). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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