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The chapters in this collection address a variety of concerns in
organizational theory, ranging from the evolution of organizations
and cross-cultural analyses of managerial behavior to the
micro-sociology of knowledge brokering within organizations and the
etiology of organizational messes. Swaminathan, examines resource
partitioning theory, an important theoretical perspective in
population ecology. The next three chapters, broadly construed,
address issues of organizational innovation, learning, and
adaptation in complex environments. The next contribution, by John
Carroll, Jenny Rudolph, and Sachi Hatakenaka examines how
high-hazard organizations learn from experience. As with all
organizations, high-hazard organizations such as nuclear power
plants and chemical plants attempt to learn from experience in
order to improve performance and, of course, to avoid catastrophic
failure. Unlike many other kinds of organizations, however, failure
to learn from prior experience-especially with respect to learning
effectively from errors and mishaps-can prove extremely costly and
even fatal. Hence, these organizations must balance between
learning and control, and must do so under conditions of
considerable oversight and scrutiny. provocative analysis of the
role disorganization plays in organizational life. The two
following chapters in this volume provide important overviews of
theory and research on classic phenomena within organizational
theory, followed by original theoretical syntheses. Robert Baron's
chapter then undertakes a fresh and useful examination of the
burgeoning literature on entrepreneurship and the two final
chapters in the volume examine essential issues related to our
understanding of organizations and the cultural environments in
which they are embedded.
This is the 19th volume in a series of reviews of research in
organizational behaviour. This volume covers such topics as:
motivational traits and skills; the dispositional causes of job
satisfaction; the ways and means of studying group processes; and
managing grand scale construction projects.
This twenty-seventh volume of Research in Organizational Behavior
carries forward the tradition of high-level scholarship on a broad
array of organizational topics. Like many previous volumes, this
collection is truly interdisciplinary, with chapters ranging from
personality and decision making in organizations, to interpersonal
dynamics such as helping and group process, to organizational-level
analyses of legitimization and change. Each of the essays is
well-reasoned, thoughtful, and provocative-- proving, once again,
that the field of organizational behavior is flourishing in both
its depth and scope. *Interdisciplinary with a wide range of
subjects discussed by experts in their fields *Addresses
personality development, empowerment, creativity, dysfunctional
groups, institutionalization, and more
This volume celebrates the first quarter century of publishing
Research in Organizational Behavior. From its inception, Research
in Organizational Behavior has striven to provide important
theoretical integrations of major literatures in the organizational
sciences, as well as timely examination and provocative analyses of
pressing organizational issues and problems.
In keeping with this tradition, the current volume offers an
eclectic mix of scholarly articles that address a variety of
important questions in organizational theory and do so from a
diverse range of disciplinary perspectives and theoretical
orientations. A number of the chapters also directly engage
contemporary events and dilemmas of considerable importance.
This 23rd volume of Research in Organizational Behavior presents
papers on a variety of topics in the field of organizational
behaviour, with the twin goals of consolidating prior research and
breaking new theoretical ground.
This is the 17th volume in an annual series of reviews of research
in organizational behaviour. This volume cover such topics as the
development of a theory of timing, a framework for the integration
of micro- and macro-organizational behaviour, and population-level
learning.
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