Redefining Management

This progressive -volume introduces the concept of smart power in management, bringing contemporary humanistic values to the power dynamics of organizations and businesses. The chapters review sociopolitical, economic, and technological conditions fueling the recent shift in ideas about power in management, from the globalization of business to young workers' motivation regarding their jobs and careers. Contributors examine a range of models, processes, and frameworks for planning and implementing smart power across diverse organizations, with accompanying challenges and caveats. In its theory and examples, the book makes a cogent case for the shift from traditional hard power, with its winner takes  all culture and potential for abuses, to a more creative and democratic model.

 

Included in the coverage:

 

·         The power of change and the need to change power: changing perception of power in the organizational setting.               

·         The dynamics of Information and Communication Technologies and smart power: implications for managerial practice.

·         Economic growth, management, and smart power.

·         New Ways of Working: from smart to shared power.

·         Positive psychological capital: from strengths to power.

·         Narcissistic leadership in organizations: a two-edged sword.                         

 

Redefining management : Smart power perspectives is proactive reading for students in professional and business-related academic fields (e.g., organizational behavior, sociology, and business and management), and for managers at all organizational levels. The book is a harbinger of transformative possibilities shaping the management landscape to come.   




Varda Muhlbauer Ph. D is a senior lecturer in Organizational Behavior at Netanya Academic College. She has worked extensively over many years in teaching, researching, and consulting managerial skills and group work. Her research in the last years has focused on topics such as power-related concepts and gender, the impact of contextual socio-political factors on the practice of management, work-family conflict, and overwork. Among her co-edited books is Working families: Parents in the labor market in Israel (2010, Peles). 

Dr Harry is an international business person who has held top management positions in two international banks and two national airlines as well as senior Advisory roles in the oil sector and within government ministries.
Wes has a Ph.D. from the Graduate School of Business, University of Strathclyde. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. Dr Harry is a Visiting Professor at the University of Chester and an Honorary Visiting Fellow at Cass Business School, City University of London.
In the past 3 years Dr Harry has edited books on Smart Management, Managing Sustainably, and contributed chapters on management in East Asia and the macro elements impacting on people management in the Arab region.

Verwandte Artikel