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This open access book brings together scholars in the fields of
management, public policy, regional studies, and organization
theory around the concept of resilience. The aim is to provide a
more holistic understanding of the complex phenomenon of resilience
from a multi-sectorial, cross-national, and multidisciplinary
perspective. The book facilitates a conversation across diverse
disciplinary specializations and empirical domains. The authors
contribute both to theory testing and theory development and
provide key empirical insights useful for societies, organizations,
and individuals experiencing disruptive pressures, not least in the
context of a post-COVID-19 world. Diverse chapters are held
together by a clear organization of the volume across levels of
analysis (resilience in organizations and societies) and by an
original perspective on resilience derived from an extended review,
by the editors, of the existing literature and knowledge gaps,
according to which each of the individual chapter contributions is
positioned and connected to.
Providing a first tentative understanding of novelty and a set of
implications for organizations to manage it, this book focuses on
the potential offered by emergent novelty, namely novelty which is
neither designed nor pursued. The author asks how organizations
might increase their abilities and strategies to benefit from its
early recognition. Such potential is broken down into positive
terms and demonstrates how early recognition is beneficial both to
organizations which aim to seize emergent innovations as well as
those which aim to avoid emergent disasters. Understanding Novelty
in Organizations aims to rethink the structure and strategies of
organizations to gain a new balance between design and randomness
in the generation of novelty. The varied perspectives presented in
this work will engage scholars interested in novelty, innovation
and creativity, and emergency management.
Providing a first tentative understanding of novelty and a set of
implications for organizations to manage it, this book focuses on
the potential offered by emergent novelty, namely novelty which is
neither designed nor pursued. The author asks how organizations
might increase their abilities and strategies to benefit from its
early recognition. Such potential is broken down into positive
terms and demonstrates how early recognition is beneficial both to
organizations which aim to seize emergent innovations as well as
those which aim to avoid emergent disasters. Understanding Novelty
in Organizations aims to rethink the structure and strategies of
organizations to gain a new balance between design and randomness
in the generation of novelty. The varied perspectives presented in
this work will engage scholars interested in novelty, innovation
and creativity, and emergency management.
This open access book brings together scholars in the fields of
management, public policy, regional studies, and organization
theory around the concept of resilience. The aim is to provide a
more holistic understanding of the complex phenomenon of resilience
from a multi-sectorial, cross-national, and multidisciplinary
perspective. The book facilitates a conversation across diverse
disciplinary specializations and empirical domains. The authors
contribute both to theory testing and theory development and
provide key empirical insights useful for societies, organizations,
and individuals experiencing disruptive pressures, not least in the
context of a post-COVID-19 world. Diverse chapters are held
together by a clear organization of the volume across levels of
analysis (resilience in organizations and societies) and by an
original perspective on resilience derived from an extended review,
by the editors, of the existing literature and knowledge gaps,
according to which each of the individual chapter contributions is
positioned and connected to.
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