2009
DOI: 10.1177/1350507608099311
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Politics Even Closer to Home: Repositioning CME from the Standpoint of Communication Studies

Abstract: This essay aims to bring politics closer to home in two main ways. First, we address geographical and disciplinary spaces and identities in order to propose a fruitful 'breeding ground' for critical management education (CME) in the US context: organizational and instructional communication studies. Second, we engage recent calls for selfrefl exivity among CME scholars, re-directing the critical lens from 'mainstream' management education to political dynamics embedded in our own practices. As we articulate po… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, critical communication pedagogy corresponds well with contemporary critical organizational communication studies that increasingly treat power relations in terms of complex intersections of salient social identities (e.g., gender, race, class, ability, age, and sexuality, as well as professional roles and disciplinary identities) that induce varying degrees of privilege and oppression (Allen, 2004;Ashcraft & Allen, 2009). Consequently, this approach can help prepare students for a multicultural world by helping them understand and negotiate identity politics.…”
Section: Critical Communication Pedagogymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Therefore, critical communication pedagogy corresponds well with contemporary critical organizational communication studies that increasingly treat power relations in terms of complex intersections of salient social identities (e.g., gender, race, class, ability, age, and sexuality, as well as professional roles and disciplinary identities) that induce varying degrees of privilege and oppression (Allen, 2004;Ashcraft & Allen, 2009). Consequently, this approach can help prepare students for a multicultural world by helping them understand and negotiate identity politics.…”
Section: Critical Communication Pedagogymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Sixth and finally, there is a trajectory of theoretical thought focusing on the institutionalization of management education. This has included analyses describing the historical development of management education – or aspects of it – in a critical spirit (Ashcraft and Allen, 2009; Crainer and Dearlove, 1999; Goodrick, 2002; Khurana, 2007; Raelin, 2009; Spender, 2005; Whitley et al., 1981; Zald, 2002). For example, in an early analysis, Whitley et al.…”
Section: An Overview Of Studies Of Critical Management Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, our Bourdieusian approach to change does not negate the potential of change initiatives, but helps to put them into perspective. It is not easy to change the institutionalized structures in management education (Ashcraft and Allen, 2009; Raelin, 2009; Starkey and Tempest, 2009). Yet there is room for change if it is accompanied by new knowledge framed as potentially valuable capital and/or if central actors in the field – including accreditation agencies – are able to promote new templates and values for management education institutions and programmes.…”
Section: Possibilities For Change In Management Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, an acknowledgment of intersectionality means that the effects of being white and being female, for example, are not additive, but interactive, upon interview exchanges. The work of Ashcraft and Allen (2009) is an exemplar of the importance of addressing the meanings of intersectionality.…”
Section: Rakesh's Storymentioning
confidence: 99%