Securing the future of management education: competitive destruction or constructive innovation?
Series: Reflections on the Role, Impact and Future of Management Education: EFMD Perspectives; v. 2Publication details: United Kingdom Emerald 2014Description: xi, 224 pISBN:- 9781783509133
- 658.40071 T4S3-II
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 37-B / Slot 2090 (2nd Floor, East Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 658.40071 T4S3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 192420 |
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1 Introduction: Success and Failure in Management Education
Chapter 2 Lessons Not Learned in Management Education
Chapter 3 On-Going Challenges Confronting Management Education
Chapter 4 Future Scenarios for Management Education
Chapter 5 Conjectures: The Road Travelled and the Road Less
Travelled
Chapter 6 Blind Spots, Dominant Logics, Tipping Points and Critical Issues for the Future: Unfolding Gaps
Chapter 7 Uncertain Futures: What Should Business Schools Do Now?
Afterword: Transformation and Future Change in Management Education
References.
This is the second of two volumes written to celebrate the 40th anniversary of EFMD. Drawing on interviews conducted with leaders in the world of management education, the first volume took a retrospective view, focusing on the evolution of management education and providing the context that led management education to where it stands today. It also synthesized respondents' views on the strengths and weaknesses of the field, the challenges it faces, as well as lessons learned and not learned from the past. This second volume similarly draws on the very rich data provided by the same respondents, but is future-oriented and takes on the theme of change. It provides the reader with a sense of the challenges on the horizon, potential blind spots, and new realities of an increasingly competitive environment. It discusses a range of alternative future scenarios for management education, and urges the field to resist the lures of the dominant paradigm and to develop new models instead. The authors contend that, given the challenges ahead, it is only through transformations and innovations that the future of the field can be secured.
(http://books.emeraldinsight.com/display.asp?K=9781783509133)
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