4 days left to submit your EGOS short paper!

There are 4 days left to submit your EGOS short paper to SWG8!

If you have never been to EGOS – the system does not accept any late submissions, so please make sure that you have paid your EGOS membership and submitted your paper by Monday 11 January 2016!

Sub-theme 08: (SWG) History and Organization Studies: The Ways Forward

Convenors:

Daniel Wadhwani, University of the Pacific, USA, and Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

dwadhwani@pacific.edu

Matthias Kipping, Schulich School of Business, York University, Canada

mkipping@schulich.yorku.ca

Stephanie Decker, Aston Business School, UK

s.decker@aston.ac.uk

Call for Papers

Historical sources, methods, and theoretical constructs have gained considerable attention in management and organizational studies in recent years (Üsdiken & Kipping, 2014). Researchers have mades a range of notable conceptual (Bucheli & Wadhwani, 2014; Rowlinson et al., 2014) and empirical contributions (O’Sullivan & Graham, 2010; Rowlinson et al., 2014; Kipping & Üsdiken, 2014) that have laid the foundations for a diverse array of approaches to historical research and reasoning in organization studies. Moreover leading journals, such as Organization Studies and Academy of Management Review, have supported these developments by announcing special issues devoted to historical research and theory. Indeed, one could fairly state that the nature and value of historical research has come to be more broadly understood and accepted than when the EGOS Standing Working Group (SWG) on “Historical Perspectives in Organization Studies” was formed.

In this, the final year of the SWG 08, we seek a broad range of empirical papers that explicitly build on the foundations that have been established but move the conversation between history and organization studies forward in interesting and novel ways. We also welcome innovative conceptual papers based on previous research. Some of the ways in which this might be done includes:

  • Building new bridges between history and other approaches to the study of organizations that are sensitive to time and context, such as process research, institutional theory, and evolutionary theory.
  • Extending the work that has been done on history and organization theory to related domains, including strategy and entrepreneurship.
  • Introducing new or underused methods for interpreting historical sources related to organizations and organizing.
  • Exploring novel types of historical source material.
  • Examining new and understudied historical periods or regions.
  • Considering new ways in which the past is used in organizations and organizing

Short paper submissions should not only describe the empirical research conducted and elaborate on theoretical claims, but should also explicitly engage the extant work on historical approaches to management and organization studies and point to promising new theoretical, methodological, and empirical directions.

References

  • Bucheli, M., & Wadhwani, R.D. (eds.) (2014): Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Kipping, M., & Üsdiken, B. (2014): “History in organization and management theory: more than meets the eye.” Academy of Management Annals, 8 (1), 535–588.
  • O’Sullivan, M., & Graham, M.B.W. (2010): “Moving Forward by Looking Backward: Business History and Management Studies.” Journal of Management Studies, 47 (5), 775–790.
  • Rowlinson, M., Hassard, J., & Decker, S. (2013): “Strategies for organizational history: A dialogue between historical theory and organization theory.” Academy of Management Review, 39 (3), 250–274.
  • Rowlinson, M., Casey, A., Hansen, P.H., & Mills, A.J. (2014): “Narratives and Memory in Organizations.”Organization, 21 (4), 441–446.
  • Üsdiken, B., & Kipping, M. (2014): “History and organization studies: A long-term view.” In: M. Bucheli & R.D. Wadhwani (eds.): Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 33–55.
  1. Daniel Wadhwaniis Fletcher Jones Associate Professor of Management at University of the Pacific, USA, and Visiting Professor at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. His research has used historical approaches to study a range of organizational issues, including the emergence of new markets, the nature of entrepreneurial agency, and the processes of categorization and value determination in organizational fields. He is co-editor (with Marcelo Bucheli) of “Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods” (Oxford University Press, 2014), which examines the role of historical research and reasoning in organization studies.

Matthias Kipping is Professor of Policy and Chair in Business History at the Schulich School of Business, York University in Toronto, Canada. His research has focused on the development and role of the different institutions of management knowledge, namely management consulting and business education. In his publications, as well as in his teaching, he has been trying to link historical research with organizational theory. He is active in a variety of scholarly associations in both business history and management and organization studies.

Stephanie Decker is Professor of Organization Studies and History at Aston Business School, UK. As a historian working at a business school, most of her work is concerned with the relation between organization theory and history. She is co-editor of ‘Business History’ and is the recipient of the prestigious Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship 2014–15, as well as the principal organizer of a seminar series on organizational history funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (UK). She co-authored “Research Strategies for Organizational History” (Academy of Management Review, 2014) with Michael Rowlinson and John Hassard.

To upload your short paper, please log in to the Member Area.

Organizational History in AMLE

At OHN we are delighted to see that Bill Cooke & Rafael Alcadipani have published an historical article in AMLE in December!

Academy of Management Learning  Education December 2015; Vol. 14, No. 4 http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4?etoc

 

From the Editors: A Year of Living Gratefully
Christine Quinn Trank
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:437-438 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0360
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/437?etoc

—————————————————————–
Research & Reviews
—————————————————————–
An Investigation of the Emotional Outcomes of Business Students’ Cheating: “Biological Laws” to Achieve Academic Excellence
Mohammed El Hazzouri, Sergio W. Carvalho, and Kelley J. Main
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:440-460 doi:10.5465/amle.2013.0031  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/440.abstract?etoc

Engagement in Cultural Trigger Events in the Development of Cultural Competence
Rebecca J. Reichard, Shawn A. Serrano, Michael Condren, Natasha Wilder, Maren Dollwet, and Wendy Wang
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:461-481 doi:10.5465/amle.2013.0043  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/461.abstract?etoc

Toward a Global History of Management Education: The Case of the Ford Foundation and the São Paulo School of Business Administration, Brazil
Bill Cooke and Rafael Alcadipani
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:482-499 doi:10.5465/amle.2013.0147  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/482.abstract?etoc

He Who Laughs Best, Leaves Last: The Influence of Humor on the Attitudes and Behavior of Interns
Filipe Sobral and Gazi Islam
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:500-518 doi:10.5465/amle.2013.0368  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/500.abstract?etoc

—————————————————————–
Exemplary Contributions
—————————————————————–

Against Evidence-Based Management, for Management Learning
Kevin Morrell and Mark Learmonth
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:520-533 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0346
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/520.abstract?etoc

—————————————————————–
Essays, Dialogues & Interviews
—————————————————————–

From the Special Section Editors: Questions Business Schools Don’t Ask
Christopher Mabey, Carolyn P. Egri, and Ken Parry
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:535-538 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0302
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/535?etoc

Challenging the Perceived Wisdom of Management Theories and Practice
Denise Baden and Malcolm Higgs
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:539-555 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0170
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/539.abstract?etoc

Questioning Neoliberal Capitalism and Economic Inequality in Business Schools
Marianna Fotaki and Ajnesh Prasad
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:556-575 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0182
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/556.abstract?etoc

Teaching Leadership Critically: New Directions for Leadership Pedagogy
David Collinson and Dennis Tourish
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:576-594 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0079
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/576.abstract?etoc

Is Narcissism Undermining Critical Reflection in Our Business Schools?Leah Tomkins and Eda Ulus
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:595-606 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0107
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/595.abstract?etoc

Aesthetics of Power: Why Teaching About Power Is Easier Than Learning for Power, and What Business Schools Could Do About It
Ian Sutherland, Jonathan R. Gosling, and Jasna Jelinek
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:607-624 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0179
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/607.abstract?etoc

Can Business Schools Humanize Leadership?
Gianpiero Petriglieri and Jennifer Louise Petriglieri
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:625-647 doi:10.5465/amle.2014.0201
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/625.abstract?etoc

—————————————————————–
Books & Resource Reviews
—————————————————————–

Trouble in the Middle: American–Chinese Business Relations, Culture, Conflict and Ethics
Robin S. Snell
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:649-650 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0240
http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/649?etoc

Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility: Stakeholders, Globalization, and Sustainable Value Creation
Timothy J. Hargrave
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:651-653 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0241  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/651?etoc

Applied Crisis Communication and Crisis Management: Cases and Exercises
Jennifer F. Wood
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:654-656 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0239  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/654?etoc

Global Leadership Practices: A Cross-Cultural Management Perspective  Christof Miska and Hale Öner
ACAD MANAG LEARN EDU 2015; 14:657-659 doi:10.5465/amle.2015.0238  http://amle.aom.org/content/14/4/657?etoc

Discover Academy of Management Discoveries Watch our first Animated Whiteboard Read the From the Editors feature

 

______________________________________________________________________

Copyright (c) 2015 by the Academy of Management.

 

Reminder: EGOS submission SWG8

There are 4 days left to submit your EGOS short paper to SWG8!

If you have never been to EGOS – the system does not accept any late submissions, so please make sure that you have paid your EGOS membership and submitted your paper by Monday 11 January 2016!

Sub-theme 08: (SWG) History and Organization Studies: The Ways Forward

Convenors:
R. Daniel Wadhwani, University of the Pacific, USA, and Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Matthias Kipping, Schulich School of Business, York University, Canada
Stephanie Decker, Aston Business School, UK

Call for Papers


Historical sources, methods, and theoretical constructs have gained considerable attention in management and organizational studies in recent years (Üsdiken & Kipping, 2014). Researchers have mades a range of notable conceptual (Bucheli & Wadhwani, 2014; Rowlinson et al., 2014) and empirical contributions (O’Sullivan & Graham, 2010; Rowlinson et al., 2014; Kipping & Üsdiken, 2014) that have laid the foundations for a diverse array of approaches to historical research and reasoning in organization studies. Moreover leading journals, such as Organization Studies and Academy of Management Review, have supported these developments by announcing special issues devoted to historical research and theory. Indeed, one could fairly state that the nature and value of historical research has come to be more broadly understood and accepted than when the EGOS Standing Working Group (SWG) on “Historical Perspectives in Organization Studies” was formed.

In this, the final year of the SWG 08, we seek a broad range of empirical papers that explicitly build on the foundations that have been established but move the conversation between history and organization studies forward in interesting and novel ways. We also welcome innovative conceptual papers based on previous research. Some of the ways in which this might be done includes:

  • Building new bridges between history and other approaches to the study of organizations that are sensitive to time and context, such as process research, institutional theory, and evolutionary theory.
  • Extending the work that has been done on history and organization theory to related domains, including strategy and entrepreneurship.
  • Introducing new or underused methods for interpreting historical sources related to organizations and organizing.
  • Exploring novel types of historical source material.
  • Examining new and understudied historical periods or regions.
  • Considering new ways in which the past is used in organizations and organizing

Short paper submissions should not only describe the empirical research conducted and elaborate on theoretical claims, but should also explicitly engage the extant work on historical approaches to management and organization studies and point to promising new theoretical, methodological, and empirical directions.

References

  • Bucheli, M., & Wadhwani, R.D. (eds.) (2014): Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Kipping, M., & Üsdiken, B. (2014): “History in organization and management theory: more than meets the eye.” Academy of Management Annals, 8 (1), 535–588.
  • O’Sullivan, M., & Graham, M.B.W. (2010): “Moving Forward by Looking Backward: Business History and Management Studies.” Journal of Management Studies, 47 (5), 775–790.
  • Rowlinson, M., Hassard, J., & Decker, S. (2013): “Strategies for organizational history: A dialogue between historical theory and organization theory.” Academy of Management Review, 39 (3), 250–274.
  • Rowlinson, M., Casey, A., Hansen, P.H., & Mills, A.J. (2014): “Narratives and Memory in Organizations.”Organization, 21 (4), 441–446.
  • Üsdiken, B., & Kipping, M. (2014): “History and organization studies: A long-term view.” In: M. Bucheli & R.D. Wadhwani (eds.): Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 33–55.
R. Daniel Wadhwani is Fletcher Jones Associate Professor of Management at University of the Pacific, USA, and Visiting Professor at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. His research has used historical approaches to study a range of organizational issues, including the emergence of new markets, the nature of entrepreneurial agency, and the processes of categorization and value determination in organizational fields. He is co-editor (with Marcelo Bucheli) of “Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods” (Oxford University Press, 2014), which examines the role of historical research and reasoning in organization studies.
Matthias Kipping is Professor of Policy and Chair in Business History at the Schulich School of Business, York University in Toronto, Canada. His research has focused on the development and role of the different institutions of management knowledge, namely management consulting and business education. In his publications, as well as in his teaching, he has been trying to link historical research with organizational theory. He is active in a variety of scholarly associations in both business history and management and organization studies.
Stephanie Decker is Professor of Organization Studies and History at Aston Business School, UK. As a historian working at a business school, most of her work is concerned with the relation between organization theory and history. She is co-editor of ‘Business History’ and is the recipient of the prestigious Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship 2014–15, as well as the principal organizer of a seminar series on organizational history funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (UK). She co-authored “Research Strategies for Organizational History” (Academy of Management Review, 2014) with Michael Rowlinson and John Hassard.
To upload your short paper, please log in to the Member Area.

 

Funded PhD in Organizational History

Cross-posted from The Past Speaks – if interested, please email Andrew Smith at ULMS.

For September 2016 entry, the University of Liverpool Management School (ULMS) will be awarding a number of PhD Studentships as part of its established doctoral funding scheme.

Consistent with our current research strengths we encourage applications in the areas of:

  • History and Institutions
  • Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management
  • Leadership, People and Management
  • Supply Chain Management, Lean Production and Agility
  • Marketing and Experiential Consumption
  • Corporate Finance, Financial Markets and Risk
  • Societal and Economic Development
  • International Business
  • Econometrics (Theory and Applied), Micro and Macro Economic Theory

 The studentships are funded by the School and represent a significant investment to further consolidate its position as a vibrant and distinct research community, as indicated by publications in top-tier journals across the above-stated areas. In addition, the school hosts a number of editorships in prestigious academic journals.

The full set of information for this call and details of how to apply is available on our website

 Closing Date for Applications: 5pm, Friday 29th January 2016

ESRC seminar 4

esrc-logoESRC Seminar Series: Historicising the theory and practice of organizational analysis

Seminar 4: Ethnography and Phenomenological Approaches

17 February 2016, Alliance Manchester Business School, Oxford Road, Manchester

Our next event in the ESRC seminar series will be hosted by Alliance Manchester Business School on Wednesday 17 February 2016. The programme is as follows:

0900-0930       Arrival and Refreshments
0930-0945       Welcome and Introduction
0945-1030       Alan McKinlay (Newcastle U): “Foucault and the archive”
1030-1115         Bill Cooke (York U): “The affect of the archive”
1115-1130         Coffee/Tea
1130-1215       Andrea Bernardi (Manchester Metropolitan U): “Auto-ethnography”
1215-1300       Andrea Whittle & John Wilson (Newcastle U): “History-in-action”
1300-1345       Buffet Lunch
1345-1430      Stephanie Decker (Aston U): “Archival ethnography”
1430-1515       Lucy Newton (Reading U): “Corporate identity”
1515-1530       Coffee/Tea
1530-1615       Daniel Mai (Consultant: Berlin): “Cultures of remembrance”
1615                Discussion and Closing Remarks

Registration: There are 25 free (ESRC-sponsored) places that will be allocated on a “first come first served” basis. A conference registration fee of £30.00 will be charged on additional places and this will include refreshments and buffet lunch.

Travel & accommodation: Expenses should be covered by participants (except speakers, whose travel and accommodation costs will be covered).

The workshop will be held in Alliance Manchester Business School, Booth Street West, Manchester M15 6PB. Alliance Manchester Business School is approximately 15 minutes walk from Manchester Oxford Road station. See University of Manchester website for details.

For further enquiries please contact the conference administrator (Nighat Din: nighat.din@mbs.ac.uk] or members of the organizing team: John Hassard (john.hassard@mbs.ac.uk) and Damian O’Doherty (damian.odoherty@mbs.ac.uk), both at Manchester Business School); Stephanie Decker (s.decker@aston.ac.uk) at Aston Business School; or Mick Rowlinson (m.rowlinson@qmul.ac.uk) at Queen Mary University London.

CfP Globalisation in Business History

Special Issue Call for Papers: “Globalisation in Business History”

International Journal of Business and Globalisation

Guest Editor: Christopher M. Hartt, Dalhousie University, chris.hartt@dal.ca

Special Issue Description:

The Special Issue will focus on historical themes related to globalisation and business.  Business History is an inclusive discipline welcoming all fields, methods and perspectives, of enquiry related to management, entrepreneurism, economics, accounting, psychology, sociology, law or any other business related discipline as well as those from history.

The theme of the special issue relates to the growing debates related to current globalizing activities and the relationship between those debates and the historical context.  What has happened in the contested past? How is that relevant for the present and future? How do themes of competitiveness, profitability, and long-term sustainability interact with ethics, social responsibility and environmentalism in a global market? Have these themes emerged before and how did they impact trade?

The questions in the forgoing paragraph provide a small sample of appropriate submissions and should not constrain researchers.  Any manner of thought provoking and rigorous article engaging globalization and Business History is encouraged.

Please upload to http://www.inderscience.com/jhome.php?jcode=ijbg and keep your submission number for future reference.

Deadline for submissions: 31 July 2016

You can expect reviewer comments by 31 October

Revisions due 31 December for publication shortly thereafter

Selected References:

Anderson, Alistair R. “Conceptualising Entrepreneurship as Economic’explanation’and the Consequent Loss Of’understanding’.” International Journal of Business and Globalisation 14, no. 2 (2015): 145-57.

Ankersmit, F. R. “Historiography and Postmodernism.” In The Postmodern History Reader, edited by Keith Jenkins. London: Routledge, 1997.

Dunning, John H. The Globalization of Business (Routledge Revivals): The Challenge of the 1990s. Routledge, 2014.

Durepos, G., A.J. Mills, and J. Helms Mills. “Tales in the Manufacture of Knowledge: Writing a Business History of Pan American Airways.” Management & Organizational History 3, no. 1 (2008): 63-80.

Galanis, Mr Michael, and Mr Alan Dignam. The Globalization of Corporate Governance. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2013.

Gallhofer, Sonja, Jim Haslam, and Sibylle van der Walt. “Accountability and Transparency in Relation to Human Rights: A Critical Perspective Reflecting Upon Accounting, Corporate Responsibility and Ways Forward in the Context of Globalisation.” Critical Perspectives on Accounting 22, no. 8 (2011): 765-80.

Hartt, C., A.J. Mills, J.  Helms Mills, and L. Corrigan. “Sense-Making and Actor Networks: The Non-Corporeal Actant and the Making of an Air Canada History.” Management & Organizational History 9, no. 3 (2014/07/03 2014): 288-304.

Hartt, C., A.J. Mills, J. Helms Mills, and G. Durepos. “Markets, Organizations, Institutions and National Identity: Pan American Airways, Postcoloniality and Latin America.” Critical Perspectives on International Business 8, no. 1 (2012): 14-36.

Hopkins, Anthony G. Globalisation in World History. Random House, 2011.

Jenkins, K. Refiguring History. New Thoughts on an Old Discipline.  London: Routledge, 2003.

Pukall, Thilo J, and Andrea Calabrò. “The Internationalization of Family Firms a Critical Review and Integrative Model.” Family Business Review 27, no. 2 (2014): 103-25.

Rivera, Isaías R. “Global Age Cosmopolitanism.” International Journal of Business and Globalisation 9, no. 1 (2012): 90-105.

Rowlinson, M. . “Public History Review Essay: Cadbury World.” Labour History Review 67, no. 1 (2002): 101-19.

Suddaby, Roy, William M Foster, and Albert J Mills. “Historical Institutionalism.” Organizations in time: History, theory, methods  (2014): 100-23.

 

 

 

Innovative @ExeterCIGH Course Receives Commendation from Royal Historical Society

Great to see our colleagues who run the AHRC network on “Imagining Markets” getting an award for their contribution to Public History in the UK!

CIGH Exeter's avatarImperial & Global Forum

Screenshot 2015-12-02 19.00.18

Cross-posted from University of Exeter College of Humanities Research News

An online course run by leading historians at the University of Exeter has received a commendation from the Royal Historical Society (RHS) for excellence in the field of public history.

The course, Empire: The Controversies of British Imperialism has been officially commended by the RHS as part of the Public History Prize; the first national prize for public history in the UK.

The commendation, given in the web and digital category, recognises the work being undertaken within the University’s Department of History to engage people with the past in innovative ways using a wide variety of resources to entice new audiences to history in all its forms.

View original post 413 more words

PDW on the Uses of the Past

Today the first of two joint seminars at CBS on organizational history took place, focusing on the forthcoming special issue in Organization Studies. While the presentations were very short, allowing authors to only present the gist of their ideas, this meant that the discussions about the papers were lively and further fleshed out what we mean by “Uses of the Past”. How do we differentiate the past from history, how does it relate to time and temporality, what type of histories are useful to organizations? The special issue editors also used to opportunity to highlight their aims and plans for handling papers going forward.

 

Program: Paper Development Workshop “Uses of the Past”, December 9, 2015 – CBS

9.00 – 9.15             Welcome & introduction

9.15 – 9.45             Karim Ben Slimane, Institut supérieur du commerce de
Paris
 & Tao Wang, Grenoble Ecole de Management: “Absinthe Reborn: Relegitimation of Deinstitutionalized Practices”Commentator: Andrew Popp, University of Gothenburg

9.45 – 10.15          Marianne Bertelsen, Copenhagen Business School: “Uses of Time: Organizing the Messy Temporalities of Contemporary Art”, Commentator: Mads Mordhorst , Copenhagen Business School

10.15 – 10.35        Coffee

10.35 – 11.05        Ron Kerr, University of Edinburgh & Sarah Robinson, University of Leicester: “Confecting a Corporate History: Uses of the Past in the Digital Age – The Case of the Mondelez International Website”,       Commentator: Roy Suddaby, University of Victoria

11.05 – 11.35        Rebecca Kahn, King’s College: “The Career of the Catalogue: Exploring Uses of the Past in the Context of the British Museum’s Digitization Strategy”, Commentator: Andrew Popp, University of Gothenburg  

11.35 – 11.50     Michael Rowlinson, Queen Mary University of London Senior Editor for Organization Studies

11.50 – 12.45        Lunch

12.45 – 13.15        William Foster, University of Alberta: “Authentic Rhetorical History: The Enactment of Sincerity & Credibility”, Commentator: Dan Wadhwani, University of the Pacific

13.15 – 13.45        Innan Sasaki, University of Turku & Davide Ravasi, City University London: “Maintaining Commitments for Centuries in Multi-Centenary Shinise Firm in Kyoto”, Commentator: Dan Wadhwani, University of the Pacific

13.45 – 14.10        Coffee break

14.10 – 14.40        Ida Lunde Jorgensen, Copenhagen Business School: “Organised Emotions: Strategic and Institutional Uses of the Past by Family Philanthropic Foundations”, Commentator: Dan Wadhwani, University of the Pacific

14.40 – 15.10        Tracy Wilcox, UNSW Business School: “A Convenient Amnesia? Organised Forgetting and Narratives of Safety in Qantas”, Commentator: Roy Suddaby, University of Victoria

15.10 – 15.30        Coffee break

15.30 – 16.00        Tristan May, EMLYON Business School: “If 6 Was 9 – Rhetorical History and the Instrumentalization of Symbolic Guitar Heroes in the Crafting of Iconic Electric Guitars”, Commentator: Mads Mordhorst, Copenhagen Business School

16.00 – 16.30        Christina Lubinski, Copenhagen Business School: “Constructing the Aryan Firm – Uses of History and Historical Negotiations on Organizational and National Levels”, Commentator: Roy Suddaby, University of Victoria

16.30 – 17.00        Discussion & Conclusion

 

CBS Rethinking History

Rethinking History at Business Schools: A CBS Initiative

Copenhagen Business School (CBS) is one of the world-leading environments for historical research at business schools and universities. The Initiative aims at making history more central to the research and pedagogical agenda of business schools.

To date, the initiative includes:

  • Growing network of scholars and activities organized around three themes: “Historical Approaches to Entrepreneurship,” “Uses of the Past: History and Memory in Organizations” and “Cultural Approaches in Business History”
  • Rethinking History-Fellowships for visiting scholars to CBS (previous visitors included Dan Wadhwani (Univ. of the Pacific), Mick Rowlinson (Queen Mary London), Ludovic Cailluet (Univ. of Toulouse), Stephanie Decker (Aston Business School) and Andrew Popp (Univ. of Liverpool)
  • Annual PhD course “Using Historical Approaches in Management and Organizational Research” (first Nov. 2014 with 20 PhDs from 9 universities worldwide)

cbs.dk/cbshis

Source: CBS Rethinking History

ToC: Business History March 2016

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

This new issue contains the following articles:

Articles
Pure diffusion? The great English hotel charges debate in The Times, 1853
David Bowie
Pages: 159-178
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1039521

The winds of change and the end of the Comprador System in the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
Andrew Smith
Pages: 179-206
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1041379

Networks of power and networks of capital: evidence from a peripheral area of the first globalisation. The energy sector in Naples: from gas to electricity (1862–1919)
Maria Carmela Schisani & Francesca Caiazzo
Pages: 207-243
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1071796

The European response to the challenge of the Japanese steel industry (1950–1980)
Pablo Díaz-Morlán & Miguel Sáez-García
Pages: 244-263
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1082545

The emergence of winemaking cooperatives in Catalonia
Jordi Planas
Pages: 264-282
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1082546

Business returns from gold price fixing and bullion trading on the interwar London market
Anthony John Arnold
Pages: 283-308
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1083012

Book Reviews
Building a market. The rise of the home improvement industry, 1914-1960
Peter Scott
Pages: 309-310
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031333

The triumph of emptiness; consumption, higher education and work organization
Philip Warwick
Pages: 310-312
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031334

Le crédit à la consommation en France, 1947–1965. De la stigmatisation à la réglementation
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 312-313
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1037580

Book Review
Le grand état-major financier: les inspecteurs des Finances, 1918–1946. Les hommes, le métier, les carrières
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 314-316
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1068516