2010
DOI: 10.1002/pmj.20141
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Project-as-Practice: In Search of Project Management Research that Matters

Abstract: Research on projects is not only an immature field of research, but it is also insubstantial when it comes to understanding what occurs in projects. This article contributes to making project management research matter to the academic as well as to the practitioner by developing a project‐as‐practice approach, in alignment with the ongoing debate in social science research. The article outlines a framework and argues that there are two major challenges to the researcher and also suggests how these challenges c… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

4
241
0
5

Year Published

2014
2014
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
4
3
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 281 publications
(265 citation statements)
references
References 61 publications
4
241
0
5
Order By: Relevance
“…On the other hand, while practiceoriented approaches to project research accept the idea of learning over the project cycle that involves experiential 'knowing' knowledge (know-how, etc. ), this approach does not seem to achieve a reconciliation with the strengths of traditional explicit project knowledge (Blomquist et al, 2010;Hällgren and Wilson, 2008;Lalonde et al, 2010Lalonde et al, , 2012Sanderson, 2012). Moreover, the issue of continuous knowledge formation as a response to knowledge uncertainty in complex projects is not adequately addressed in the literature, in terms of the implications for how projects are conceptualised and how knowledge can be obtained about them (Thomas, 2000;Winter et al, 2006).…”
Section: Project Management As a Process Of Dynamic Organizing-learnimentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…On the other hand, while practiceoriented approaches to project research accept the idea of learning over the project cycle that involves experiential 'knowing' knowledge (know-how, etc. ), this approach does not seem to achieve a reconciliation with the strengths of traditional explicit project knowledge (Blomquist et al, 2010;Hällgren and Wilson, 2008;Lalonde et al, 2010Lalonde et al, , 2012Sanderson, 2012). Moreover, the issue of continuous knowledge formation as a response to knowledge uncertainty in complex projects is not adequately addressed in the literature, in terms of the implications for how projects are conceptualised and how knowledge can be obtained about them (Thomas, 2000;Winter et al, 2006).…”
Section: Project Management As a Process Of Dynamic Organizing-learnimentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In recent project research, this unresolved knowledge dichotomy is acknowledged by Blomquist et al (2010), who highlight the advantages of a practice-oriented approach by observing that "a dynamic setting for action is created on the local arena where knowledge and action come together in practice" (p. 13, italics added). If experiential 'knowing' knowledge is required for action (Cook and Brown, 1999;Schön, 1983), this suggests a convergence in PM practice settings between explicit 'known' knowledge and experiential 'knowing' knowledge.…”
Section: Complex Problem Solving As a Dynamic Organizing-learning Intmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, proponents of project actuality reject the view of projects as pro-forma (Blomquist et al 2010;Cicmil et al 2006), instead believing them to be constituted by "the actions of interdependent actors through the process of power and conversational relating" and through engaging in sense-making processes (Cicmil et al 2006, p. 677).…”
Section: Background the Actuality Of Complex Projectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There has been criticism of mainstream research into projects and project management in the past for its heavy reliance on the functionalist view of projects and organizations (Blomquist et al 2010;Cicmil et al 2006;de Bakker, Boonstra & Wortmann 2010). This control theory approach views project management as "the accomplishment of some finite piece of work in a specified period of time, within a certain budget, and to agreed specification (which is, in turn, a conventional definition of a project)" (Cicmil et al 2006, p. 677).…”
Section: Background the Actuality Of Complex Projectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We would suggest that Dreyfus' criticism of artificial intelligence aligns with the existing criticism of the project management community's attempts to codify its practice in the bodies of knowledge and various methodologies . That is, management of projects cannot be reduced to a standard set of rules or procedures to be followed because a large portion of the interactions by project participants and stakeholders (with their Dasein mode of being) are tacit, contextual and transparent (Blomquist et al 2010;Cicmil et al 2006;Koskinen, Pihlanto & Vanharanta 2003). The rules emerge dynamically out of the totality of the changing situation.…”
Section: Dealingmentioning
confidence: 99%