This timely Handbook establishes the 'contextualization' of the learning organization idea as a research field.
In contrast to much of the previous literature, which has approached the learning organization as a panacea that every organization could and should adopt, this major new Handbook puts the learning organization into context. It examines the relevance of the learning organization idea to organizations in various specific contexts, employing examples from a wide variety of cultures including China and Islamic nations, and from industries as diverse as the police force, care services for the elderly and family firms.
Scholars and students with an interest in organizational learning will find this important Handbook enriching. Human resource practitioners will also find plenty of invaluable information in this resource.
Contributors: C. Abrahamson Löfström, A. Ahmad, M. Babur, Y. Baruch, N. Birdthistle, D.A. Blackman, C. Blantern, P. Bogolyubov, T. Boydell, H.T.M. Bui, J. Burgoyne, X. Cong, D.J. Delgado-Hernández, M. Drobnjak, M. Easterby-Smith, Z. Fan, C. Filstad, T.N. Garavan, P. Gottschalk, J.F.L. Hong, S.-w. Hsu, D. Jamali, B. Li, Z. Li, M. Lin, C. Lloyd, D. McDowall, A. Örtenblad, C. Peng, Y. Sidani, R.S. Snell, C. Stothard, S. Talbot, M. Torokoff-Engelbrecht, K.E. Watkins, D. Weir, J. Zhou
Show moreThis timely Handbook establishes the 'contextualization' of the learning organization idea as a research field.
In contrast to much of the previous literature, which has approached the learning organization as a panacea that every organization could and should adopt, this major new Handbook puts the learning organization into context. It examines the relevance of the learning organization idea to organizations in various specific contexts, employing examples from a wide variety of cultures including China and Islamic nations, and from industries as diverse as the police force, care services for the elderly and family firms.
Scholars and students with an interest in organizational learning will find this important Handbook enriching. Human resource practitioners will also find plenty of invaluable information in this resource.
Contributors: C. Abrahamson Löfström, A. Ahmad, M. Babur, Y. Baruch, N. Birdthistle, D.A. Blackman, C. Blantern, P. Bogolyubov, T. Boydell, H.T.M. Bui, J. Burgoyne, X. Cong, D.J. Delgado-Hernández, M. Drobnjak, M. Easterby-Smith, Z. Fan, C. Filstad, T.N. Garavan, P. Gottschalk, J.F.L. Hong, S.-w. Hsu, D. Jamali, B. Li, Z. Li, M. Lin, C. Lloyd, D. McDowall, A. Örtenblad, C. Peng, Y. Sidani, R.S. Snell, C. Stothard, S. Talbot, M. Torokoff-Engelbrecht, K.E. Watkins, D. Weir, J. Zhou
Show moreContents:
Preface
Anders Örtenblad
PART I: INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
1. Introduction: Putting the Learning Organization into Context: An
Emerging Research Field
Anders Örtenblad
2. What do we Mean by ‘Learning Organization’?
Anders Örtenblad
3. Putting the Learning Organization into Context: Contributions
from Previous Works
Anders Örtenblad, Ziyun Fan, Chenghao Peng, Boying Li, Ziyan Li,
Xiaoying Cong and Jie Zhou
4. Contextualizing the Learning Organization: Approaches to
Research Design
Anders Örtenblad
5. Obstacles to the Learning Organization
David Weir and Anders Örtenblad
PART II: THE LEARNING ORGANIZATION IN CONTEXT
Section A. Culture and Religion
6. National Culture and the Learning Organization: An Integrative
Framework
Pavel Bogolyubov and Mark Easterby-Smith
7. Developing Learning Organizations in China
Jacky F.L. Hong, Robin Stanley Snell and Mian Lin
8. Learning Organization Practices in Mexico: An Empirical
Study
David Joaquín Delgado-Hernández and Made Torokoff-Engelbrecht
9. Islamic Perspective of the Learning Organization
Aini Ahmad
Section B. Industries and Sectors
10. Learning, Trust and Change within the Australian Army: The
Development of the Army Learning Organization Questionnaire
(ALOQ)
Maya Drobnjak, Christina Stothard, Steven Talbot, Karen E. Watkins
and Denise McDowall
11. The Police Force: To be or not to be a Learning
Organization?
Cathrine Filstad and Petter Gottschalk
12. The Learning Organization in Elderly Care – Can it Fit?
Carina Abrahamson Löfström
13. Family Firms as Learning Organizations
Naomi Birdthistle and Thomas N. Garavan
14. Universities as Learning Organizations: Internationalization
and Innovation
Hong T.M. Bui and Yehuda Baruch
Section C. Mixed Contexts
15. Public Sector Organizations as Learning Organizations: Insights
from the Education System in Pakistan
Muhammad Babur
16. The Learning Organization: Opportunities and Challenges for
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in Developing Countries
Dima Jamali, Yusuf Sidani and Charissa Lloyd
PART III: REFLECTIONS ON THE LEARNING ORGANIZATION
17. The Universality of Learning Company Principles: A Critical
Realist Approach
John Burgoyne
18. Who is the Learning Organization For? A Stakeholder Contingency
Approach to Contextualizing Managerial Panaceas
Anders Örtenblad
19. ‘The Learning Organization’ – Drop the Dead Metaphor!
Performing Organizing and Learning in Networks (So to Speak)
Chris Blantern, Tom Boydell and John Burgoyne
20. Alternative Learning Organization
Shih-wei Hsu
21. Contextualising the Learning Organization: How will it Help us
Learn in the Future?
Deborah Ann Blackman
22. Towards a Contingency Model: Recommendations for Further
Research
Anders Örtenblad
Index
Edited by Anders Örtenblad, Professor of Work Life Science, University of Agder, Norway
‘The uniqueness of this book compared to other books on the topic
of learning organizations is threefold: it offers a pragmatic
perspective; it supplies evidence from different contexts; and it
has the vision of creating a contingency model of the relevance of
the learning organization idea.. . .I would recommend this book not
only to scholars engaged in organizational research but also to
practitioners at every organizational level. Managers or MBA
students can use this book to enhance their understanding of the
learning organization and gain valuable ideas about how to design
their own organization for optimal long-term performance and
adaptability.’
*Nhien Nguyen, Management Learning*
‘Örtenblad offers a contingency framework differentiating the idea
of the learning organization as portrayed in research and practice
to shed light on context as key to the idea’s relevance. The
contingency framework anchors chapter authors’ interrogation into
adaptation of enduring, underlying principles by divergent
context–in industry, sector, national culture, religious
orientation, and philosophical underpinnings. Readers will value
analysis and synthesis of what is known from research as well as
informed probing of what could be learned through the lens of
provocative viewpoints. Scholars will appreciate Örtenblad’s
assessment of extant research and arguments made for
“researcher-assisted adaptation” to balance rigid prescriptions
with informed guidance in navigating contextual differences when
deciding to enact the learning organization.’
*Victoria J. Marsick, Columbia University, US*
‘The Handbookis a very well researched and excellent tool for
anyone interested in the concept of learning, and particularly in
the global organizational context. I highly recommend this book to
managers of companies both large and small wanting to compete in
the global landscape by highlighting the important learning that
occurs in their organizations.’
*Vanessa Ratten, Thunderbird International Business Review*
'This handbook has moved the field of learning organization
research forward considerably. It has paved the way for future
research by providing a more nuanced conceptual framework than
hitherto existed. This framework will make it easier for future
studies to compare findings and contribute to a contingency
framework of the learning organization concept. Moreover, the book
also offers new, alternative perspectives on the learning
organization which, if implemented in practice, may stimulate more
innovation and change. I would recommend this book not only to
scholars engaged in organizational research but also to
practitioners at every organizational level. Managers or MBA
students can use this book to enhance their understanding of the
learning organization and gain valuable ideas about how to design
their own organization for optimal long-term performance and
adaptability. Employees who wish to figure out what is going on at
the top level of management can use this book and the contingency
approach as an inspiration to find meaning in management language
and strategies.'
*Management Learning*
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