|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Volume 2 of Shipp and Fried's edited collection includes chapters
that address how time impacts groups, organizations, and
methodological choices.
The concept of time is a crucial filter through which we understand
any events or phenomena; nothing exists outside of time. It
conditions not only the question of 'when', but also influences the
'what, how and why' of our ideas about management. And yet
management scholars have rarely considered this 'temporal lens' in
understanding how time affects employees at work, or the
organizations for which they work. This 2-volume set provides a
fresh, temporal perspective on some of the most important and
thriving areas in management research today. Volume 1 considers how
time impacts the individual, and includes chapters on identity,
emotion, motivation, stress and creativity. Volume 2 considers time
in context with the organization, exploring a temporal
understanding of leadership, HRM, entrepreneurship, teams and
cross-cultural issues. There is an overall concern with the
practical implications of understanding individuals and
organizations within the most relevant timeframes, while the two
volumes provide an actionable research agenda for the future. This
is a highly significant contribution to management theory and
research, and will be important reading for all students and
researchers of Organizational Behavior, Organizational Psychology,
Occupational Psychology, Business and Management and HRM.
The concept of time is a crucial filter through which we understand
any events or phenomena; nothing exists outside of time. It
conditions not only the question of 'when', but also influences the
'what, how and why' of our ideas about managment. And yet
management scholars have rarely considered this 'temporal lens' in
understanding how time affects employees at work, or the
organizations for which they work. This volume considers time in
context with the organization, exploring a temporal understanding
of leadership, HRM, entrepreneurship, teams and cross-cultural
issues.
The concept of time is a crucial filter through which we understand
any events or phenomena; nothing exists outside of time. It
conditions not only the question of 'when', but also influences the
'what, how and why' of our ideas about management. And yet
management scholars have rarely considered this 'temporal lens' in
understanding how time affects employees at work, or the
organizations for which they work. This 2-volume set provides a
fresh, temporal perspective on some of the most important and
thriving areas in management research today. Volume 1 considers how
time impacts the individual, and includes chapters on identity,
emotion, motivation, stress and creativity. Volume 2 considers time
in context with the organization, exploring a temporal
understanding of leadership, HRM, entrepreneurship, teams and
cross-cultural issues. There is an overall concern with the
practical implications of understanding individuals and
organizations within the most relevant timeframes, while the two
volumes provide an actionable research agenda for the future. This
is a highly significant contribution to management theory and
research, and will be important reading for all students and
researchers of Organizational Behavior, Organizational Psychology,
Occupational Psychology, Business and Management and HRM.
|
You may like...
Catan
(16)
R1,150
R887
Discovery Miles 8 870
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|