Recent decades have witnessed a dramatic expansion of management
education and practice. At the same time, the formalization of
management practice has allowed for a widespread diffusion of management
ideas across sectors and continents. This book provides an up-to-date
summary of the development, refinement, and diffusion of managerial
ideas, adding detail and explanation to commonly held conceptions about
the explosion of management knowledge.
The contributors contend that management ideas do not flow automatically
but are actively shaped and transformed by knowledge carriers--business
schools, consultancies, and the media. Drawing on data from worldwide
empirical studies, the chapters analyze how such carriers are organized,
how they act and react, and how they shape and reshape knowledge. The
book places the development and diffusion of management knowledge in a
wider environmental and historical context and offers stimulating
comparisons of European and American management traditions.
The combination of theory and practice will make this book a valuable
resource for courses dealing with management, organizational and
institutional theory, and globalization.