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This volume problematizes different facets of management education
in India---pedagogy, curricula, and disciplinary and institutional
practices---from the perspective of the Global South. The essays in
this volume bring out the institutional challenges of crafting a
relevant academic programme that converses with both national
specificities and global realities. Coming from diverse academic
specializations, the contributors traverse the interface of their
respective disciplines with management education. In doing so, they
engage with the ongoing global debate on management education. This
volume fills a noticeable gap of serious, scholarly reflection on
the state of management education. While there have been sporadic
reflections and occasional critiques, a critical stocktaking of the
institutional and disciplinary aspects of management education has
been long wanting. This volume is of interest to scholars and
practitioners of management education across the globe, and is
likely to generate debate on its contemporary relevance and future
trajectory.
While examining the intersections and engagements between sociology
and management education in historical and contemporary terms, this
slim volume outlines the agenda of a promising prospective
engagement between the two. It specifically foregrounds the Indian
experience without being indifferent to the global context that has
shaped the unprecedented rise of business schools. Employing a
perspective from the Global South, it contextualises the dominance
of the US model of management curriculum and disciplinary practices
in relation to wider geopolitics of knowledge production.
Parenthetically, it presents a critical assessment of Indian
scholarly contributions to the field of management studies. This
book should be of interest to management educators, administrators,
and sociologists besides the students and researchers in the broad
area of organisation studies.
This volume problematizes different facets of management education
in India---pedagogy, curricula, and disciplinary and institutional
practices---from the perspective of the Global South. The essays in
this volume bring out the institutional challenges of crafting a
relevant academic programme that converses with both national
specificities and global realities. Coming from diverse academic
specializations, the contributors traverse the interface of their
respective disciplines with management education. In doing so, they
engage with the ongoing global debate on management education. This
volume fills a noticeable gap of serious, scholarly reflection on
the state of management education. While there have been sporadic
reflections and occasional critiques, a critical stocktaking of the
institutional and disciplinary aspects of management education has
been long wanting. This volume is of interest to scholars and
practitioners of management education across the globe, and is
likely to generate debate on its contemporary relevance and future
trajectory.
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