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Debating business school legitimacy ...
~
Ortenblad, Anders.
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Debating business school legitimacy = attacking, rocking, and defending the status quo /
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Debating business school legitimacy/ edited by Anders Ortenblad, Riina Koris.
Reminder of title:
attacking, rocking, and defending the status quo /
other author:
Ortenblad, Anders.
Published:
Cham :Springer International Publishing : : 2022.,
Description:
xix, 327 p. :ill. (some col.), digital ;24 cm.
[NT 15003449]:
Part I. Background and introduction -- Chapter 1. Introducing the Debate on the Legitimacy of Business Schools (Riina Koris and Anders Örtenblad) -- Chapter 2. (De)legitimacy of Managerialism within Business Schools (Katariina Juusola) - Part II. Attacking status quo -- Chapter 3. Business Schools in Their Ideological Prison: Why Sustainability Challenge Is Our Next Legitimacy Crisis (Kimmo Alajoutsijärvi, Katariina Juusola, and Kerttu Kettunen) -- Chapter 4. The Reflexive Impotence and Neoliberal Neurosis of the Responsible Business School (Nikodemus Solitander) -- Chapter 5. Business School Burnout: Endangering Legitimacy on Pathological Pathways (Volker Rundshagen) - Part III. Rocking the boat of status quo, etc.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Business schools. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12725-0
ISBN:
9783031127250
Debating business school legitimacy = attacking, rocking, and defending the status quo /
Debating business school legitimacy
attacking, rocking, and defending the status quo /[electronic resource] :edited by Anders Ortenblad, Riina Koris. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2022. - xix, 327 p. :ill. (some col.), digital ;24 cm. - Palgrave debates in business and management,2524-5090. - Palgrave debates in business and management..
Part I. Background and introduction -- Chapter 1. Introducing the Debate on the Legitimacy of Business Schools (Riina Koris and Anders Örtenblad) -- Chapter 2. (De)legitimacy of Managerialism within Business Schools (Katariina Juusola) - Part II. Attacking status quo -- Chapter 3. Business Schools in Their Ideological Prison: Why Sustainability Challenge Is Our Next Legitimacy Crisis (Kimmo Alajoutsijärvi, Katariina Juusola, and Kerttu Kettunen) -- Chapter 4. The Reflexive Impotence and Neoliberal Neurosis of the Responsible Business School (Nikodemus Solitander) -- Chapter 5. Business School Burnout: Endangering Legitimacy on Pathological Pathways (Volker Rundshagen) - Part III. Rocking the boat of status quo, etc.
"This important and sobering collection of essays on the modern business school will provoke debate and may inspire needed change. If you believe, as I do, that today's professional schools have an obligation to help address society's most pressing challenges through the pursuit of actionable research and practical education, you will find much value in this book." -Amy C. Edmondson, Professor, Harvard Business School, USA "Provocative in parts but nonetheless evoking questions for business school leaders to reflect upon in deciding what to change to regain legitimacy where deemed lost; or what to retain to defend the status quo where deemed apt. Brilliant!" -Enase Okonedo, Professor, Vice-Chancellor, Pan-Atlantic University, Lagos, Nigeria "Business schools have become a key part of the landscape of contemporary higher education. However, their role is proving increasingly controversial. This book demonstrates why this is so and what needs to change. This book takes us to the heart of the problems business schools face which are, alas, very much of their own making." -Ken Starkey, Professor of Management and Organisational Learning, Nottingham University Business School, UK This book channels the debate on the relevance, value, and future of business schools. Could the Business School be like the Titanic, thought to be unsinkable, but ultimately doomed? Or is it a ship which can adapt to the changing waters it sails in? In this book, authors from around the world debate the current and future legitimacy of the Business School from different contexts and perspectives. While some see very little or no hope at all to the future of the Business School as a legitimate center for research and education, others remain critical, but see a way forward to rectify today's concerns, such as around sustainability and inclusivity. Anders Örtenblad is Professor of Working Life Science at the School of Business and Law, University of Agder, Norway, and Professor II at Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway. Riina Koris is Associate Professor in the Department of Marketing and Communication at Estonian Business School.
ISBN: 9783031127250
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-12725-0doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
677428
Business schools.
LC Class. No.: HF1111
Dewey Class. No.: 650.0711
Debating business school legitimacy = attacking, rocking, and defending the status quo /
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Part I. Background and introduction -- Chapter 1. Introducing the Debate on the Legitimacy of Business Schools (Riina Koris and Anders Örtenblad) -- Chapter 2. (De)legitimacy of Managerialism within Business Schools (Katariina Juusola) - Part II. Attacking status quo -- Chapter 3. Business Schools in Their Ideological Prison: Why Sustainability Challenge Is Our Next Legitimacy Crisis (Kimmo Alajoutsijärvi, Katariina Juusola, and Kerttu Kettunen) -- Chapter 4. The Reflexive Impotence and Neoliberal Neurosis of the Responsible Business School (Nikodemus Solitander) -- Chapter 5. Business School Burnout: Endangering Legitimacy on Pathological Pathways (Volker Rundshagen) - Part III. Rocking the boat of status quo, etc.
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"This important and sobering collection of essays on the modern business school will provoke debate and may inspire needed change. If you believe, as I do, that today's professional schools have an obligation to help address society's most pressing challenges through the pursuit of actionable research and practical education, you will find much value in this book." -Amy C. Edmondson, Professor, Harvard Business School, USA "Provocative in parts but nonetheless evoking questions for business school leaders to reflect upon in deciding what to change to regain legitimacy where deemed lost; or what to retain to defend the status quo where deemed apt. Brilliant!" -Enase Okonedo, Professor, Vice-Chancellor, Pan-Atlantic University, Lagos, Nigeria "Business schools have become a key part of the landscape of contemporary higher education. However, their role is proving increasingly controversial. This book demonstrates why this is so and what needs to change. This book takes us to the heart of the problems business schools face which are, alas, very much of their own making." -Ken Starkey, Professor of Management and Organisational Learning, Nottingham University Business School, UK This book channels the debate on the relevance, value, and future of business schools. Could the Business School be like the Titanic, thought to be unsinkable, but ultimately doomed? Or is it a ship which can adapt to the changing waters it sails in? In this book, authors from around the world debate the current and future legitimacy of the Business School from different contexts and perspectives. While some see very little or no hope at all to the future of the Business School as a legitimate center for research and education, others remain critical, but see a way forward to rectify today's concerns, such as around sustainability and inclusivity. Anders Örtenblad is Professor of Working Life Science at the School of Business and Law, University of Agder, Norway, and Professor II at Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway. Riina Koris is Associate Professor in the Department of Marketing and Communication at Estonian Business School.
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based on 0 review(s)
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