2019
DOI: 10.1177/1350507619865383
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ReviewingManagement Learning: The field and the journal

Abstract: We trace the origins and development of the management learning movement that has come to be closely associated with the journal Management Learning and explain how ideas that shaped the creation of business schools influenced the inception of this field. We then examine themes and trends that have been prevalent in the field in the second half of the journal’s 50-year history, through an analysis of its coverage over a 24-year period from 1994 to 2018. During this time, there has been a marked shift away from… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Yet much academic work – what we research, what topics we teach and how we think about them – are based on values which may (inadvertently) support unsustainable or socially unjust behaviours (Ergene et al, 2021). While unethical and damaging business behaviours may be the unwitting outcome of complex commercial activity (Anderson et al, 2020), many critical scholars perceive them as the privileging of greed (see Gabriel, 2009; Ghoshal, 2005) over a desire to work towards creating thriving and flourishing for all societal stakeholders – human and nonhuman alike.…”
Section: Refusing Business Education-as-it-ismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet much academic work – what we research, what topics we teach and how we think about them – are based on values which may (inadvertently) support unsustainable or socially unjust behaviours (Ergene et al, 2021). While unethical and damaging business behaviours may be the unwitting outcome of complex commercial activity (Anderson et al, 2020), many critical scholars perceive them as the privileging of greed (see Gabriel, 2009; Ghoshal, 2005) over a desire to work towards creating thriving and flourishing for all societal stakeholders – human and nonhuman alike.…”
Section: Refusing Business Education-as-it-ismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a value-laden undertaking (Khakee, 2003), evaluation offers potential to connect theory and practice through a deeper questioning of what value, for whom and for what purpose, surfacing differences, and tensions among and between different sets of values. With calls for robust conceptual frameworks that reflect and interrogate the complexity of management learning with a view to social change (Anderson et al, 2019), perhaps it is timely, honouring Mark's legacy, for a renewed focus on Evaluation.…”
Section: Valerie Stead: Demonstrating Value In Management Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the early 1990s, Mark and I worked together on a major evaluation project with Ford Motor Company (Stead and Easterby-Smith, 1995). Reflecting on this project, and ideas of evaluation, brought to mind Anderson et al’s (2019) observations in their review of the 50-year history and field of management learning. They remark on a shift from an applied focus on manager and management development, toward a more theoretical perspective, that has strengthened management learning’s conceptual underpinnings but with less obvious links to practitioners.…”
Section: Section 3: Developing Holistic Theory and Practice: Toward P...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While sustainability is currently a “hot topic” in management learning (Anderson et al , 2020), business schools face multiple challenges with integrating and growing sustainability within their curricula (Thomas, 2018; Rasche and Gilbert, 2015; Rasche et al , 2013; Solitander et al , 2012; Young and Nagpal, 2013; Baets and Oldenboom, 2013) and in creating capacities for management executives to be aware of the reality of growth not being inclusive nor sustainable (Hesselbarth and Schaltegger, 2014). This criticism is part of a larger debate on relevance, curricula, pedagogy and impact of business school management education and Master of Business Administration (MBA) programmes (Bennis and O’Toole, 2005; Birnik and Billsberry, 2008; Chia and Holt, 2008; Datar et al , 2011; Ghoshal, 2005; Mintzberg, 2004; Mitroff et al , 2015; Moldoveanu and Martin, 2008; Pfeffer and Fong, 2002; Schlegelmilch and Thomas, 2011; Thomas and Cornuel, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%