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Managing for Social Justice: Harnessing Management Theory and Practice for Collective Good 2023 ed. [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 545 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x148 mm, weight: 868 g, 13 Illustrations, color; 13 Illustrations, black and white; XXV, 545 p. 26 illus., 13 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 3031199707
  • ISBN-13: 9783031199707
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 545 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x148 mm, weight: 868 g, 13 Illustrations, color; 13 Illustrations, black and white; XXV, 545 p. 26 illus., 13 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • ISBN-10: 3031199707
  • ISBN-13: 9783031199707
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The book introduces a preliminary, integrative conceptual framework on the intersections between management and social justice with a view that the quest for social justice is not an endpoint rather an ongoing journey. With contributions from management scholars and practitioners, it highlights, examines, and explores the continuities and discontinuities, gains and losses, and struggles and successes in this quest for reimagining organizations as sites and vehicles for advancing social justice in the world. 

To nurture and facilitate flourishing individuals and collectives, we need bolder, more innovative, and more creative models of engagement. Further, we need models for speaking and learning from different perspectives and building common ground through shared values of equity, connectivity, and compassion and moral expansiveness while recognizing the complexities of the world we inhabit via our organizations and the need to develop nuanced understandings of the same.

Contributing authors address questions such as: Are social justice and management mutually exclusive concepts? How can we draw on effective management for advancing social justice aims? How do we bend the arc of organizational life towards more justice? What are the rights and obligations of organizations and their members to the world at large, and to their local communities and societies?

Through its re-imagining of organizations and management as vehicles for social justice instead of just as tools of oppression, injustice, or regressive organizing in an extractive economy, this book brings together critical and positive organizational approaches challenging fundamental assumptions about how our society, people’s collectives, and workplaces are organized with capacity building, incremental change, sustained change, institutionalized change, dynamic ongoing problem-solving/ assessment/ redesign, and more. 

Management scholars will learn the nuanced and complex intersections between management theories and practice and different types of justice/injustice in a global context both as antecedents to modern organizations and workplaces and the ways in which these intersectional actors advance and change the organizations and workplaces of the future.

1 Management and Social Justice: An Oxymoron, a Pipedream, or an Inevitability?
1(14)
Latha Poonamallee
Anita D. Howard
Simy Joy
2 A Postcolonial Deconstruction Approach Toward Promoting Socially Conscious Management in the Emerging Economies
15(30)
Udayan Dhar
Susan Case
3 Iteration as an Anarchist Organizational Management Practice
45(22)
Conrad I. Walker
4 Social Justice: A Micro Policy Perspective
67(30)
Shashwat Shukla
Shantam Shukla
5 Shifting from Charity to Justice: A Recasting of the Role of Philanthropic Organizations in the Indian Context
97(22)
Ria Sinha
Urvi Shriram
Latha Poonamallee
?nd Mallika Luthra
6 Balancing Commerce and Conviction: Emerging Business Models for News Media
119(40)
Afsal Najeeb
Mohammed Shahid Abdulla
7 Technological Revolution and Evolution of Management Models in the COVTD Era: A Social Justice Perspective
159(28)
Akhil S. G.
Latha Poonamallee
8 Sustainability Leadership: Current Perspective and Future Adaptation
187(42)
Thomas Kohntopp
Jack McCann
9 Social Exclusion and Socioeconomic Inequalities of Black STEM Workers: A Systematic Literature Review
229(44)
Bryce Adams
10 From Liminality to Inclusion: Cooperatives as Catalysts for Refugee Women's Identity Work
273(36)
Deniz Oztiirk
11 Workplace Transformation in India: Creating a Trans-Inclusive Environment
309(36)
Minu Zachariah
A. Satya Nandini
12 Charging Collective Ability: The Transformative Power of Action Learning for Inclusive Organizations
345(42)
Mies de Koning
13 The Interrogatory Imperative: Hope and Persistence from 20 Years of Interrogating Whiteness in OD
387(34)
Kathryn L. Fong
14 Integrative OAD: De-neutralizing the Organizational Assessment Canon to Advance Humanistic Change
421(34)
Anthony D. Meyers
Carrie E. Neal
Kathryn L. Fong
15 Managing Neurodiversity Inclusion in Today's Entrepreneurial-Styled Workplace
455(32)
T. Stenn
A. R. Lalor
Jan Coplan
D. A. Osterholt
16 Experiential Learning for the MBA: Career Preparation for Nontraditional Students
487(38)
Pamela Chandler Lee
17 Managing for Social Justice: A Call for Action
525(16)
Simy Joy
Latha Poonamallee
Anita D. Howard
Index 541
Latha Poonamallee is Associate Professor, Chair of Management Faculty, and University Fellow at the New School, USA. Anita D. Howard is an adjunct professor in the Department of Organizational Behavior at Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Reserve University, USA and a mentor executive coach at the Weatherhead School of Executive Management Education, USA.

Simy Joy is Faculty Fellow at the Center of Excellence for Social Innovation (CESI) at the Indian Institute of Management, Kozhikode, India.