New JC Spender Essay

15 March 2007 at 1:10 am Leave a comment

| Nicolai Foss |

JC Spender is one of my favorite management thinkers. I may disagree with him, but he is usually challenging and very often profound (in contrast to some other management thinkers who have been discussed here at O&M). And he writes extremely well. JC has a new essay coming out in Journal of Management Inquiry, “Management as a Regulated Profession.” (It can also be downloaded from JC’s site). Much of the content of the paper is a discussion and diagnosis of the theory-practice gap, including pointing out that this discussion has been going for a very long time: “Redlich (1957) tells of the 19th-century German steel town that, its business failing, pressed the local business school principal to take charge. The business failed anyway, and he was put in jail — where he died — to ponder the gap between rigor and relevance. Deans beware!”

Here is the abstract:

The history of management education shows the rigor and relevance gap has been around for centuries, well before its appearance in the United States. Nor is it peculiar to management. It is neither germane to our discipline’s present difficulties nor an appropriate focus for our critics. Rather, history suggests we finally parted company with managers after the 1959 Ford and Carnegie reports, as we presumed rationality alone was the sufficient basis for understanding them and their doings. These reports helped us turn management education into a profession even as management itself has yet to become one. To return closer to managers, the author suggests rationality captures one dimension of their practice, whereas the notion of business as an art form might capture its complement. Reformed art education, covering art’s history, aesthetics, criticism, and production, provides a framework for studying the managerial art, and leads us to a rich, dynamic theory of the firm.

Entry filed under: - Foss -, Management Theory, Recommended Reading, Teaching.

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