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In this rich history of management ideology and practice, Mauro Guillen charts the diffusion of scientific management, human relations, and "structural analysis" in the United States, Germany, Spain, and Great Britain during the 20th century
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Recent neoinstitutional analyses have associated the rapid diffusion of due-process governance mechanisms in the American workplace with government pressure for equal employment opportunity and affirmative action
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The Employment Relationship reports the results of an ambitious research project begun in the early 1980s, in which some 2,000 randomly sampled Chicago-area employees and their employers were surveyed about employment policies and conditions
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To examine the effects of policy on markets and competition we outline hypotheses about the effects of three common policy regimes -- public capitalization, pro-cartel, and antitrust -- on competition and the founding of new firms
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Over the past two decades, neoinstitutional theory has challenged the dominant functionalist explanations of organizations and has become one of the most creative and promising new paradigms in the social sciences
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014147160
In this essay, Erhard Friedberg builds on his collaborative work with Michel Crozier, published in English in 1980 as Actors and Systems: The Politics of Collective Action (Universitiy of Chicago Press), to call for a broader conceptualization of organization theory and for a broader applicaiton...
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