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El. knyga: Primer on Decision Making: How Decisions Happen

3.69/5 (132 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: 289 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-May-1994
  • Leidėjas: The Free Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439108338
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 289 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-May-1994
  • Leidėjas: The Free Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781439108338
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Building on lecture notes from his acclaimed course at Stanford University, James March provides a brilliant introduction to decision making, a central human activity fundamental to individual, group, organizational, and societal life. March draws on research from all the disciplines of social and behavioral science to show decision making in its broadest context. By emphasizing how decisions are actually made -- as opposed to how they should be made -- he enables those involved in the process to understand it both as observers and as participants.

March sheds new light on the decision-making process by delineating four deep issues that persistently divide students of decision making: Are decisions based on rational choices involving preferences and expected consequences, or on rules that are appropriate to the identity of the decision maker and the situation? Is decision making a consistent, clear process or one characterized by ambiguity and inconsistency? Is decision making significant primarily for its outcomes, or for the individual and social meanings it creates and sustains? And finally, are the outcomes of decision processes attributable solely to the actions of individuals, or to the combined influence of interacting individuals, organizations, and societies? March's observations on how intelligence is -- or is not -- achieved through decision making, and possibilities for enhancing decision intelligence, are also provided.

March explains key concepts of vital importance to students of decision making and decision makers, such as limited rationality, history-dependent rules, and ambiguity, and weaves these ideas into a full depiction of decision making.

He includes a discussion of the modern aspects of several classic issues underlying these concepts, such as the relation between reason and ignorance, intentionality and fate, and meaning and interpretation.

This valuable textbook by one of the seminal figures in the history of organizational decision making will be required reading for a new generation of scholars, managers, and other decision makers.
Acknowledgments v
Preface vii
1. Limited Rationality 1
The Idea of Rational Choice
1
Limited (or Bounded) Rationality
8
Theories of Attention and Search
23
Risk and Risk Taking
35
2. Rule Following 57
Decision Making as Rule Following
57
Rules, Identities, and Action
59
Rule Development and Change
76
Appropriate Rules or Consequential Choice?
100
3. Multiple Actors: Teams and Partners 103
Interpersonal Consistency and Teams
104
Interpersonal Inconsistencies
105
Social Bases of Inconsistencies
111
Uneasy Partners
120
4. Multiple Actors: Conflict and Politics 139
Decisions and Power
140
Decisions and Coalitions
151
Participation and Decision Instabilities
160
Single Actors and Multiple Actors
172
5. Ambiguity and Interpretation 175
Order and Ambiguity in Decision Making
175
Ambiguous Bases of Decision Making
180
Loose Coupling in Organizations
192
Garbage Can Decision Process
198
Decision Making and the Construction of Meaning
207
Ambiguity and Understanding
218
6. Decision Engineering 221
Defining Decision Intelligence
222
Improving Adaptiveness
234
Using Knowledge
240
Creating Meaning
258
Notes 273
Additional Reading 275
Index 283
About the Author 290
James G. March is the Jack Steele Parker Professor of International Management and a professor of political science and sociology at Stanford University. Professor March is the author and co-author of numerous books and hundreds of journal articles on organizations, decision making, and leadership. He lives in Stanford, California.