Few managers of African organizations are trained in managing
people. They may be technically proficient in their jobs, but there
is a prevailing certainty that because they have lived among other
people, they know instinctively how to manage them. Not true, says
psychologist and organizational behavior specialist Ugwuegbu.
Moreover, not only do the new African states suffer severe
shortages of managers of any kind, they also lack resources to give
those they do have the skills in human behavior management they
need. Dr. Ugwuegbu's book seeks to improve management effectiveness
and efficiency by providing a better, more comprehensive
understanding of African work systems and the behavior of Africans
at work. His book, the first of its kind, introduces the science of
human behavior into the management of African organizations. It
challenges the reign of colonial management practices and blames
them for the failure of African managers to adopt modern management
techniques. Although it absolves African cultures of the
responsibility for the poor performance of African workers, it
holds management rigorously responsible, and agrees with existing
opinion that not only should leadership effectiveness be
measurable, but it should be measured. Human relations, as
practiced in African firms, is only one aspect of human resource
planning, and in fact, African organizations should learn from
human conflict, not try to fight it--all of which makes his book
essential for professionals in African organizations and for those
elsewhere who want to do business with them, as well as for
scholars and graduate students in various fields of the social,
behavioral, and administrative sciences.
Dr. Ugwuegbu sets out to broaden the African manager's concept
of the organization as both a pyschological and physical entity,
and to do this he integrates knowledge of human behavior from
psychological perspectives into the management of African
organizations. He also shows that African governments are
responding positively to calls from the international financial
community for the commercialization and privatization of
government-owned African companies. In nine chapters he covers such
topics as the colonial management legacy; the psychological
problems of African organizations; problems of motivation,
leadership, and power; decision making; conflict and conflict
management; and performance evaluation and training and
development. The chapters are unified by one common objective: to
explore the dynamics of the African workplace and to help African
professionals make use of it, and then to enhance the understanding
of Africa's management problems among managers and executives in
other countries worldwide.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!