Title: SOME KEY ISSUES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANAGEMENT RESEARCH
1SOME KEY ISSUES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANAGEMENT
RESEARCH
- Andrew M. Pettigrew FBA
- Dean
- School of Management
- University of Bath
- Presentation to the Association of Business
Schools Conference Business Schools of the 21st
Century Global challenges and future
directions October 17-18, 2005
2STRUCTURE OF PRESENTATON
- The Aspiration
- The present reality
- A better future? The five Is
- Impact
- Innovations in theory and method
- Interdisciplinarity
- Internationalism
- Involvement and independence
- Selected capacity building issues
- Demographic trends
- Leadership and management of collaborative
research - Experimentation with new doctoral programmes
3THE ASPIRATION
- THE DUTY OF INTELLECTUALS IN
- SOCIETY IS TO MAKE A
- DIFFERENCE
- Sir Thomas More
- (Shortly before his execution in 1535)
4THE PRESENT REALITY
- THE MANAGEMENT OF
- INDIFFERENCE
5A BETTER FUTURE?THE FIVE Is
- IMPACT
- INNOVATIONS IN THEORY AND METHOD
- INTERDISCIPLINARITY
- INTERNATIONALISM
- INVOLVEMENT AND INDEPENDENCE
6GREATER IMPACT?
- PURPOSE
- The Double Hurdle Scholarly Quality
- and Relevance
- WHAT KIND OF KNOWLEDGE?
- What-to Knowledge
- and
- How-to Knowledge
7MODERNIST SCIENCE
- Progress to be based upon reason
- Scientific progress dependent on knowledge
expressed in universal law - Knowledge best advanced through the dedicated
work of scientific disciplines - Truth would be determined through scientific
testing - This testing required precision and reduction
- Only then could scientists hand over to practice
the fruits of their labours.
8DOUBTS ABOUT MODERNIST SCIENCE
- Not so much with what
- the modernist tradition has done,
- but with what that tradition has left out
9THE EXHAUSTION OF THE VARIABLES PARADIGM
- Has led to real actors being replaced by
- variables, narrative causality by the reified
- causality of variables,
- real time by the order of the variables
- Andrew Abbott (1991)
10AFTER MODERNISM
- Searching for general truths AND give greater
- weight to temporal and spatial context
- The abstractionism and reductionism of the
variables paradigm AND a new concern for action
dynamics, context and complexity - Temper the deductive ambition AND encourage
inductive thinking and research practice - The extending boundaries will create the
conditions for greater scholarly AND policy impact
11SHAPERS OF EXECUTIVE BEHAVIOUR
- Contextual Realities
- Socio-economic political contexts
- Sectoral market contexts
- Intra organizational contexts
- Performance realities
- Temporal Realities
- The heavy hand of the past
- The life cycle of the sector, organization and
leader - Intended and unintended consequences of leader
actions - Changing contextual, performance, and political
conditions The ever-moving platform
12INNOVATIONS IN THEORY AND METHOD
- A more contextualist and dynamic view of knowing
will create new conditions to meet the double
hurdle of scholarly quality and relevance.
13INTERDISCIPLINARY(Working Across Boundaries)
- Often misguidingly portrayed as an end in itself
- Issue is purposeful Big themes rarely
effectively addressed from the myopia of single
disciplines, or fields. - Often requires construction of teams led by
individuals open to interdisciplinary inquiry
14INTERNATIONALISM(Working Across Borders)
- One of biggest weaknesses of UK social and
management science - Management sciences are not culture free, but
culture bound - Truth is the daughter of space and time
- Policy makers in many fields are hungry for
international comparison and perspective.
15INVOLVEMENT AND INDEPENDENCE
- The necessary condition for impact
- User interest in research is often
- Fickle
- Time and Context dependent
- Rests on quality informal interaction built up
over time - Creating and exploiting networks
- But need to balance involvement with independence
- Involvement should not mean capture by policy
interests and values - We must retain our capacity for iconoclasm and
challenge
16SELECTED CAPACITY BUILDING ISSUES
- Demographic trends Reconfigure rather than
merely replace those who go - Leadership and management of collaborative
research - Foundations are fateful experimentation with new
doctoral programmes
17PERCENTAGE OF ACADEMICS DUE TO RETIRE IN NEXT 10
YEARS IN UK FIELDS OF STUDY
- Education 48
- Sociology 36
- Management 33
- Economics 32
- Mathematics 31
- Physics 18
- Chemistry 16
18NEW DOCTORAL PROGRAMMES IN MANAGEMENT?
- Management a confluence of different fields of
inquiry - Fragmented
- Intellectually diverse
- Pluralism of theory and method
- Clearer and deeper intellectual traditions and
identities since 1970s - Uneven quality
- Limited impact beyond its own boundaries
- With exceptions of finance, progressive
disengagement from roots in the social sciences - Yet taken much more from social sciences than
have given back
19DOCTORAL PROGRAMME IN MANAGEMENT GROUNDED IN
SOCIAL SCIENCES
-
- PURPOSE To widen and deepen
- students awareness, critical faculties and
choice of perspective through engagement with
appropriate management and social science fields
20TRAINING ELEMENT
- Principles
- Social science training not at expense of method
training - Strong method training utilising management and
social science approaches - Specialist management modules and selected social
science contributions, perhaps thematically framed
21CANDIDATE THEMES
- Principles
- Themes are
- Chosen to reflect strong policy connections
- Chosen to reflect strong management and social
science connectedness - For example
- Choice and change
- Uncertainty and risk
- Innovation
- Globalization
- Business and society
22SUPERVISION
- Dual supervision by a scholar with
- strong management credentials and
- another with strong social science
- credentials
23AND FINALLY
- Such a doctoral programme will help supply side
problems we face as a management community - Social science element will attract strong
candidates from social science disciplines - Thematic element will attract in post experience
candidates in late 20s, early 30s who are at
the moment some of the best PhD candidates in the
best US business schools.