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The Oxford Handbook of Innovation Management offers a comprehensive
and timely analysis of the nature and importance of innovation and
the strategies and practices that can be used to improve
organizational benefits from innovation. Innovation is centrally
important for business and national competitiveness, and for the
quality and standard of living around the world, but it does not
happen by itself. For innovation to succeed, it needs to be
properly managed. With contributions from 49 world-leading
scholars, the Handbook explores the many sources of innovation, the
broader social, economic, and technological contexts that encourage
and constrain it, and the cutting-edge strategies and practices of
innovation management. The book addresses the traditional concerns
of innovation management-such as managing R&D, intellectual
property, and creativity, and the contributions of science and
marketing-but substantially extends traditional areas of interest.
In this new volume, chapters examine emerging topics including
design, social networks, open and social innovation, and innovation
in business models, ecosystems, services, and platforms. The book
explores the importance of innovation management for environmental
sustainability, and its evolving nature and practice in Asia.
Written in an accessible style, and with carefully selected
bibliographies and a comprehensive index, the Handbook offers a
uniquely authoritative and wide-ranging source of knowledge about
innovation management. Each chapter identifies key issues and
reviews the most important research findings. Future research
questions are identified. The Handbook will be invaluable for
students and faculty studying, researching, and teaching
innovation, and for managers seeking to improve innovation outcomes
in their organizations.
Both history and current events attest to the continued
significance of religion in society. Despite the role and
importance of the institution of religion, and the profound
influence that religious organizations continue to exert, it
occupies a curiously marginal place in organization theory. At the
same time, organization theory has been criticized for its narrow
focus on corporations and there have been calls to study a much
broader range of organizational forms (e.g., Bamberger and Pratt,
2010). Interestingly, the small number of studies on religious
organizations to have published have had a disproportionate impact
on the field. This suggests that religious organizations deserve
more attention, and that attending to them will have significant
benefits for our understanding of organizations. This volume brings
together leading organization theorists with an interest in
religion. The aim is to consolidate and make available in one place
existing knowledge on religion and organizations, as well as
encouraging more organization theorists to include religion as part
of their research activities and agenda.
Discourse Analysis: Investigating Processes of Social Construction is the first book to provide a concise, straightforward guide for students and researchers who are interested in understanding and using discourse analysis. The authors reflect on the practice of analyzing discourse and the potential for revealing the processes of social construction that constitute social and organizational life. Addressed to graduate students, academics, and experienced researchers, this book is a comprehensive guide for those new to discourse analysis as well as for researchers in need of a complement to other modes of inquiry.
Across the social sciences, scholars are increasingly showing how
people 'work' to construct organizational life, including the rules
and routines that shape and enable organizational activity, the
identities of people who occupy organizations, and the societal
norms and assumptions that provide the context for organizational
action. The idea of work emphasizes the ways in which people and
groups engage in purposeful, reflexive efforts rooted in an
awareness of organizational life as constructed in human
interaction and changeable through human effort. Studies of these
efforts have identified new forms of work including emotion work,
identity work, boundary work, strategy work, institutional work,
and a host of others. Missing in these conversations, however, is a
recognition that these forms of work are all part of a broader
phenomenon driven by historical shifts that began with modernity
and dramatically accelerated through the twentieth century. This
book introduces the social-symbolic work perspective, which
addresses this broader phenomenon. The social-symbolic work
perspective integrates diverse streams of research to examine how
people purposefully and reflexively work to construct
organizational life, including the identities, technologies,
boundaries, and strategies that constitute their organizations. In
this book, the authors define social-symbolic work and introduce
three forms - self work, organization work, and institutional work.
Social-symbolic work highlights people's efforts to construct the
social world, and focuses attention on the motivations, practices,
resources, and effects of those efforts. This book explores eight
distinct streams of social-symbolic work research, drawing on a
broad range of examples from the worlds of business, politics,
sports, social movements, and many others. It provides researchers,
students, and practitioners with an integrative theoretical
framework useful in understanding social-symbolic work, a survey of
the main forms of social-symbolic work, a rich set of theoretical
opportunities to inspire new studies, and practical methodological
guidance for empirical research on social-symbolic work.
The Oxford Handbook of Innovation Management offers a comprehensive
and timely analysis of the nature and importance of innovation and
the strategies and practices that can be used to improve
organizational benefits from innovation. Innovation is centrally
important for business and national competitiveness, and for the
quality and standard of living around the world, but it does not
happen by itself. For innovation to succeed, it needs to be
properly managed. With contributions from 49 world-leading
scholars, the Handbook explores the many sources of innovation, the
broader social, economic, and technological contexts that encourage
and constrain it, and the cutting-edge strategies and practices of
innovation management. The book addresses the traditional concerns
of innovation management-such as managing R&D, intellectual
property, and creativity, and the contributions of science and
marketing-but substantially extends traditional areas of interest.
In this new volume, chapters examine emerging topics including
design, social networks, open and social innovation, and innovation
in business models, ecosystems, services, and platforms. The book
explores the importance of innovation management for environmental
sustainability, and its evolving nature and practice in Asia.
Written in an accessible style, and with carefully selected
bibliographies and a comprehensive index, the Handbook offers a
uniquely authoritative and wide-ranging source of knowledge about
innovation management. Each chapter identifies key issues and
reviews the most important research findings. Future research
questions are identified. The Handbook will be invaluable for
students and faculty studying, researching, and teaching
innovation, and for managers seeking to improve innovation outcomes
in their organizations.
Full Title: "Southwestern Bell Telephone Company vs. City of Fort
Worth et all.} No. 409-E. In Equity"Description: "The Making of the
Modern Law: Trials, 1600-1926" collection provides descriptions of
the major trials from over 300 years, with official trial
documents, unofficially published accounts of the trials, briefs
and arguments and more. Readers can delve into sensational trials
as well as those precedent-setting trials associated with key
constitutional and historical issues and discover, including the
Amistad Slavery case, the Dred Scott case and Scopes "monkey"
trial."Trials" provides unfiltered narrative into the lives of the
trial participants as well as everyday people, providing an
unparalleled source for the historical study of sex, gender, class,
marriage and divorce.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++409-EFort WorthCourt RecordHarvard Law
School Libraryc.1925
Discourse Analysis: Investigating Processes of Social Construction is the first book to provide a concise, straightforward guide for students and researchers who are interested in understanding and using discourse analysis. The authors reflect on the practice of analyzing discourse and the potential for revealing the processes of social construction that constitute social and organizational life. Addressed to graduate students, academics, and experienced researchers, this book is a comprehensive guide for those new to discourse analysis as well as for researchers in need of a complement to other modes of inquiry.
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