12/23/20: An Introduction to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
https://www.loom.com/share/b05d3f23812d4ef09d3eed14e553317e
Week 1 (Coronado National Memorial to Tucson, Arizona): Deep Received Cosmologies
1. A Crash Course on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
2. Northern Asia (China)
(Jia, Rowlinson, Loosemore, Xu, Li, Ciccarelli, …2019—safety in Chongqing and Hong Kong)
(Xu, Qin, Dust, & DiRenzo, 2019—supervisor proactivity, subordinate activity, psych. safety)
3. Southern Asia (India)
(Krishnan, Johri, & Chandresekaran, … 2019—Post-demonetization resilience)
4. Scandinavia (Norway/Denmark)
(Bye, Almklov, Antonsen, Nyheim, …, 2019—22 July 2011 Norway terror attacks)
(Mejlhede, 2019—design thinking innovation study of a (probably Danish) fintech org)
5. Eastern Europe (Russia)
Former Soviet Union Countries: (Vlados, Deniozos, Chatzimkolaou, … 2019)
Russian-language studies: (Гудова, 2019)
6. Mexico/Central America/Caribbean (The Caribbean)
(Lachlan, Xu, Hutter, Adam, … 2019 – 2017 Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria)
(Son, Sasangohar, Peres, … 2019—August 17-September 2, 2017, Hurricane Harvey)
(Prestley, 2019—Houston meteorologists’ rhetorical framing of 2017 Hurricane Harvey)
7. South America (Brazil/The Amazon)
(Oliver, Calvard, & Poto?nik, 2019 – 2009 Air France crash)
(de Rond, Holeman, & Howard-Grenville, 2019—three-man rowing trip northwards on Amazon)
Portuguese-language studies: (Oliveira, 2019—sensemaking and sense-giving in Brazil)
8. A Conference on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
9. West/Central Africa (Nigeria)
(Ogbu Edeh, Ugboego, … 2019—Nigerian bank resilience)
(Adamu & Mohamad, 2019a, 2019b—Nigeria internal crisis communications)
10. East/Southern Africa (Uganda)
Uganda (1): (Langevang & Namatovu, 2019—post-war context of northern Uganda)
11. North Western Europe (Germany)
(Duchek, Raetze, & Scheuch, 2019)
(Azadegan, Srinvasan, & Blome, 2019)
German Language: (Rolfe, 2019a, 2019b; Schubert, 2019)
12. South Western Europe (France)
(Pelletier & Drozda-Senkowska, 2019a, 2019b—7 January 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris)
(Older, 2019—Sciences Po article on “Organizing after Disaster”)
(Elliott, 2019—misaligned book on Joan of Arc somehow showed up in the 360 citations set)
French-language articles: (Maisonnasse, Petrella, & Richez-Battesti, 2019; Mouhli & Paturel, 2019; Lauzier & Lemieux, 2019)
(Sánchez-Rodriguez, Guinot, Chiva, … , 2019)
13. Northern Greater Middle East (Afghanistan)
(de Graaf, Giebels, Meijer, & Verweij, 2019—Dutch military sensemaking in Afghanistan) (Dixon, Weeks, Boland, & Gaskill, 2019—extension of 30 U.S. Army officers in Afghanistan)
14. Southern Greater Middle East (Iraq/Syria)
(Semaan, 2019—March 2003 Second Gulf War and infrastructuring as a resilience creator)
(Gatzweiler & Ronzani, 2019—July 2014 to November 2015 refugee camp study)
(Kornberger & Leixnering, 2020—2015 Syrian refugee crisis migration through Vienna)
15. A Celebration of Deep Received Cosmologies
The assigned reading for today's hike/lecture/seminar/module is J. Douglas Orton and Kari A. O'Grady (2016. Cosmology episodes: A reconceptualization. Journal of Management, Spirituality & Religion.
The assigned video for today's hike/lecture/seminar/module is Expedition 149's 3/23/20 introduction to Deep Received Cosmologies:
The meeting place/time for this hike/lecture/seminar/module is the Canadian border crossing within Glacier National Park, at 8:00 a.m. on Monday, June 29, 2020.
Today's fifteen learning objectives are the following:
1. An Introduction to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The Vietnam War, Three UK Disasters, and the 4-6 August 1949 Mann Gulch Fire
2. A Northern Asia Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The 12 May 2008 Sichuan Earthquake
3. A Southern Asia Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The 2 December 1984 Bhopal Chemical Leak and December 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami
4. A Scandinavian Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies; The Danish Cartoon Incident
5. An Eastern European Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies; Chernobyl
6. A Mexico/Caribbean/Central American Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: The 12 January 2010 Haiti Earthquake
7. A South American Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: Rowing the Amazon and Traversing the Mountains of Southern Chile
8. A Mid-Course Conference on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
9. A Western/Central African Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; Ongoing Extreme Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
10. An Eastern/Southern Africa Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; Robert Mugabe's "Take Out the Trash" Project in Harari
11. A Northern Western Europe Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The Shootdown of Flight MH-17
12. A Southern Western Europe Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The 15 April 2019 Notre Dame Cathedral Fire
13. A Northern Greater Middle East Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; A Study of the 2007-2013 Human Terrain Teams in Afghanistan
14. A Southern Greater Middle East Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; Child Cyber-trafficking in Egypt
15. A Conclusion to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
1. An Introduction to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The Vietnam War, Three UK Disasters, and the 4-6 August 1949 Mann Gulch Fire
You're in Good Hands in Expedition 150: Welcome to Expedition 150, the second of our cut-to-the-chase executive education doctoral seminars on Resilience Leadership Practices during Cosmology Episode Processes. We begin today, June 29, 2020, and will finish on October 10, 2020. In order to create an orderly sense that you're in good hands, we're reframing the last 37 years of hard work around the world as 148 previous Expeditions that began with Expedition 1 in Spring 1983 and concluded in Winter 2019 with Expedition 148. Over time, we will push much of the current content in this course backwards into previous expeditions in order to keep our current Expedition focused on "brand-new" research.
The Videos from Expedition 149 Can Help Us: One of the investments that we made in Expedition 149 (3/23/20-7/4/20) was to film 225 ten-minute lectures from the Mexican Border on March 23, 2020, to the Canadian Border on July 4, 2020. Yes, that's six days a week of ten-minute videos (3 on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays; 2 on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays) that we posted from the Great Western Trail, with a seven-year-old cameraman named Daniel, while Dr. O'Grady's workload as a psychology professor increased exponentially with the COVID-19 catastrophe and Daniel's infinite number of first-grade learning modules became something we all started doing together before, during, and after hiking.
Extreme Executive Education, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/23/20 video: "So today we're outside [on] the Cascade Mountain. Strengthens our immune system and gives us energy. I'm Dr. O'Grady, a psychologist and director of the Center for Trauma Studies and Resilience Leadership. We are mindful of our global community going through some unprecedented challenges. We're hoping to use the resilience processes we've learned through studying organizational and community trauma around the world to help us see this time as a time when we can learn and grow and create a new way forward. With me today is Dr. Orton. He's a professor of management and also our research director at the Center for Trauma Studies [and Resilience Leadership]. In the background you see our seven-year-old. We're doing our work as many of us are doing it at this time -- those of us who are fortunate enough to be able to work from home."
Vietnam War, from the assigned readings: (Kramer & Gavrieli, 2004) (Staw, Sandelands, & Dutton, 1981) (Sandelands, 2012) (Sandelands & Carlson, 2013)
UK Collapse, UK Fire, UK Wreck, from the assigned readings: (Turner, 1976)
2. A Northern Asia Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The 12 May 2008 Sichuan Earthquake
From the Transcript of Expedition 149's 3/23/20 video: "We've located the Center here in this beautiful valley."
5 August 1949 Mann Gulch: One of the techniques we will use to turbocharge the academic rigor of this doctoral seminar is to go as far out into this wide, wide world of cosmology episode studies as we can by citing all of the approximately 300 citations in Academic Year 2019-2020 to Dr. Karl E. Weick's (1993) cosmology episode article -- which is an ongoing research partnership between Norman Maclean's adult lifetime (1949-1990) literary obsession with making sense of the senseless Mann Gulch fire disaster and Karl Weick's adult lifetime (1960-2020) academic obsession with sensemaking in organizations. The initial, only article from that research partnership was published in Administrative Science Quarterly in 1993, which makes it possible for diverse scholars in diverse disciplines in diverse countries to leverage the initial Maclean/Weick ideas about cosmology episodes in unexpected ways. Our Great Western Trail project is -- among other things -- an attempt at better "Managing the Unexpected" ways in which Maclean/Weick's complementary obsessions can be used to reduced human suffering.
12 May 2008 Sichuan earthquake, from the assigned reading: (O'Grady, Orton, & Jones Christensen, 2018)
3. A Southern Asia Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies; The 2 December 1984 Bhopal Chemical Leak and December 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami
Resilience Leadership, from the Transcript of Expedition 149's 3/23/20 video: "So we have in the Center twelve different approaches -- things that we call Resilience Leadership [Practices]."
Cosmology Episode Studies: For the 2015 Barcelona conference of the International Association for Management, Spirituality, and Religion, we reviewed all of the Google Scholar citations -- at the time -- of the term "cosmology episodes." In this introduction to Deep Received Cosmologies, we will not try to delve too deeply into the twelve Resilience Leadership Practices and the fifteen Cosmology Episode Processes. The primary task this week is to break ourselves and our target audience -- the scholars, executives, consultants, practitioners, and students who are trying to respond to the C19 outbreak -- out of their parochial perspectives. One of the sacrifices we will make to accomplish this frame-braking project is to ignore, for now, cosmology episode studies within the "anglophonic academic hegemon" of the U.S., Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand (e.g. Weick, 1985, 1993; McLellan, Omodel, Elliott, & Holgate, 2011).
2-3 December 1984 Bhopal: Although some have argued that a fifteen-module course taught on the Great Western Trail should only focus on wildland firefighting in the United States, we believe that several international cosmology episode studies laid the foundation for the cosmology episode studies from U.S. wildland firefighting. Chief among these are Weick's reanalysis of Paul Shrivastavas's book on the Bhopal chemical leak (Shrivastava, 1987; Weick, 1988, 2010; Maitlis & Sonnenshein, 2010).
2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, from the assigned reading: One of the tasks in this course is to master the landmark cosmology episode cases -- e.g. the Sichuan earthquake in China and the Bhopal chemical leak in India -- but not to stop with outdated landmark cases. For example, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami (like the C19 outbreak) killed hundreds of thousands of people in many countries (Littlefield, Sellnow, & Attansey, 2006; Bourk, 2011)
4. A Scandinavian Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies; The Danish Cartoon Incident
Leadership, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/23/20 video: "So very quickly we start with personal leadership, direct leadership -- spiritual leadership would be a part of that."
1994 South Canyon Fire: One of the reasons we seek to create executive education partnerships with fifteen universities on the Great Western Trail -- University of Arizona, Arizona State University, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Dixie State University, Southern Utah University, Snow College, Utah Valley University, the Brigham Young universities, University of Utah, Weber State University, Utah State University, Idaho State University, University of Wyoming, Montana State University, and University of Montana -- is to create sociomaterial, kinetic, and deep understandings for would-be Resilience Leaders during Cosmology Episodes at the actual sites of the three most catastrophic wildland firefighting cosmology episodes: Yarnell Hill, Arizona; South Canyon, Colorado; and Mann Gulch, Montana. (Editorial note: South Canyon is about six hours east of the Great Western Trail; it will probably be necessary to experience it virtually, rather than by foot.)
The Danish Cartoon Incident, from the assigned readings: (Frandsen & Johansen, 2010; Johansen, Aggerholm & Frandsen, 2012)
5. An Eastern European Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies; Chernobyl
Structure, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/29/20 video: "Then we expand to structure. Much of what happens in organizations happens in a design. The COVID-19 [outbreak] is allowing many organizations to think through the structures. Are likely to emerge with a different culture."
Early-1980s Personal Computing Cosmology Episodes: Although our area of expertise is resilience leadership practices during cosmology episode processes, we cannot launch into a conversation with other experts in the broader fields of social psychology, multicultural psychology, the psychology of trauma, and the psychology of religion and spirituality (Dr. O'Grady's scholarly communities) and leadership, strategy, organizations, and management (Dr. Orton's scholarly communities) without engaging in a routinized reading program that gets us out and about in numerous additional disciplines. We do this by keeping track of scholarly publications that use the term "cosmology episode" (Weick, 1976, 1985, 1993; Orton & O'Grady, 2016; Orton & Weick, 1990).
Chernobyl, from the assigned readings: One of the recent developments that we will emphasize in this course is the rise of cosmology episode studies in nations in and around Eastern Europe (Perrow, 1984).
6. A Mexico/Caribbean/Central American Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; The 12 January 2010 Haiti Earthquake
Culture, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/29/20 video: "The third thing we pay attention to is culture -- macroculture, meso-culture, and micro-culture."
Jamaican Investment Club Cosmology Episode: We start our Resilience Leadership doctoral-level education courses with a review of cosmology episodes that have been studied outside the United States, some of which are well-known through scholarly publications used by professors at elite U.S. universities, but most of which are little-known. To increase our probabilities of recruiting doctoral students from around the world to study Resilience Leadership, we try to maintain six networks of cosmology episode studies in the Pacific Rim, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, Western Europe, and the Greater Middle East. Although today is intended to open a window on one of these twelve networks, it never hurts to provide a bigger picture than what might be expected -- and we promised a colleague we're trying to recruit at the Center for Trauma Studies and Resilience Leadership that we would provide some notes and references here to try to explain a role she might play in the executive education project we're building here on the LinkedIn platform during the C19 outbreak.
12 January 2010 Haiti Earthquake: We were thrilled to notice that our research on the Haiti earthquake from a cosmology episode lens (O'Grady & Orton, 2016; Orton & O'Grady, 2016) was recently legitimized in a big way by friends publishing in The American Psychologist (Roysircar, Thompson, & Geisinger, 2019).
2013 A1H1N Outbreak, from the assigned readings: The Haiti earthquake, though, is merely one component of the Mexican/Caribbean/Central American part of the world. which we do not wish to exclude with the anglophonic academic hegemon. Another theme will celebrate is the need for more research on Mexican cosmology episodes, such as an increasingly relevant study of the A1H1N virus outbreak in 2013 (Speakman & Sharpley, 2012)
Climate Crisis, from the assigned readings: One of the themes we will weave throughout all fifteen executive education modules is the centrality of Native American cosmologies to the United States (Gosling & Case, 2013),
7. A South American Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: Rowing the Amazon and Traversing the Mountains of Southern Chile
Strategy, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/23/20 video: "The fourth thing we look at is strategy. Microstrategies and microstrategizing. Small wins during catastrophes."
2013 Rowing the Amazon: An early cosmology episode study set in South America has been supplanted in this year's executive education offerings on twelve Resilience Leadership Practices during fifteen Cosmology Episode Processes -- and more specifically in this first module on Deep Received Cosmologies -- by two recent articles on rowing the Amazon (de Rond, Holeman, & Howard-Grenville, 2019) and traversing the southern Chilean mountains (Musca et al., 2019).
Siula Grande climbing "wreck", from the assigned readings: (Yue & Mills, 2011)
8. A Mid-Course Conference on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
Change, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/29/20 video: "The fifth thing we pay attention to is change. Organizational change comes in three flavors. There's a teleological view of change. Move from position X to position. Dialectical. The type of change you ought to be paying attention to during the COVID [outbreak]. Schumpeterian economics, if you're interested in that. Some large environmental jolt kicks the organization into a new space.
Mid-Course Conferences: Research on effective teams, which we aspire to be with you in this project, shows the high value of improvisational mid-course corrections. We will institutionalize this best practice with Wednesday evening receptions hosted by fifteen U.S. universities on the Great Western Trail. For scholars, executives, consultants, practitioners, and/or students who are choosing to camp out for most of the week, we hope you will consider getting a good night's sleep on Wednesday evenings -- we'll try to negotiate a good price on lodging at a fun place somewhere between Glacier National Park and Mann Gulch on Wednesday night this week.
9. Cosmology Episodes in Western/Central Africa; Ongoing Extreme Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Decision-making, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/29/20 video: "In the field of decision-making we talk about Rational Decision-making, Political, Organizational Decision-making and Complexity. Multiple sources of improvisation accumulating into organizational decisions. You really don't want to have a person at the top of the organization believing himself or herself to be the source of all solutions to the COVID-19 [outbreak]."
Ongoing Extreme Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, from the assigned reading: (Muhren, Van Den Eede, Van de Walle, 2009)
10. Cosmology Episodes in Eastern/Southern Africa; Robert Mugabe's "Take Out the Trash" Project in Harari
Learning, Sensemaking, Collaboration, Strategizing, Innovation, Resilience, from the transcript of Expedition 149's 3/29/20 video: "So those are the first six strands of our theory and research that we've been working on. Maybe take a day and we'll come back and talk about the other six. A preview of coming attractions."
11. Cosmology Episodes in Northern Western Europe; The Shootdown of Flight MH-17
We start our Resilience Leadership doctoral-level education courses with a review of cosmology episodes that have been studied outside the United States, some of which are well-known through scholarly publications used by professors at elite U.S. universities, but most of which are little-known. To increase our probabilities of recruiting doctoral students from around the world to study Resilience Leadership, we try to maintain six networks of cosmology episode studies in the Pacific Rim, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, Western Europe, and the Greater Middle East. Although today is intended to open a window on one of these twelve networks, it never hurts to provide a bigger picture than what might be expected -- and we promised a colleague we're trying to recruit at the Center for Trauma Studies and Resilience Leadership that we would provide some notes and references here to try to explain a role she might play in the executive education project we're building here on the LinkedIn platform during the C19 outbreak.
A nervous breakdown in a German factory, from the assigned readings: (Terwiesch, Loch, & De Meyer, 2002)
12. Cosmology Episodes in Southern Western Europe; The 15 April 2019 Notre Dame Cathedral Fire
November 1980 Southern Italian earthquake, from the assigned readings: (Lanzara, 1999)
Sinking of The Herald of Free Enterprise, from the assigned readings: (Roux-Dufort, 2007) (Simonsen, 2013)
13. A Northern Greater Middle East Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies; 2007-2013 Human Terrain Teams in Afghanistan
1979-1981 Iranian Hostage Crisis, from the assigned readings: (Thietart & Forgues, 1997)
2007-2013 Human Terrain Teams in Afghanistan, from the assigned readings: (Locher, 2009) (Lamb, Orton, Davies, & Pikulsky, 2013)
14. A Southern Greater Middle East Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: Child Cyber-trafficking in Egypt
Scholars at Texas and Michigan: For several reasons -- primarily because universities in the middle of the United States have better contributions to make to our understanding of Resilience Leadership than the more settled, elite, well-resourced East Coast and West Coast universities -- we use the Texas universities and the Michigan universities as our windows to the world in the beginning and ending modules of all of our doctoral-level executive education projects. Both of these large groups of universities have had Silicon-Slopes-friendly social networks for us since the 1830s and 1840s (for example, our Chidester ancestors are from Michigan and our Cropper ancestors are from Texas). These are also the only environments in which we worked face-to-face with Dr. Karl E. Weick (at University of Texas from 1985-1987 and at University of Michigan from 1987-1990). Bringing a heavy dose of Texas/Michigan international-level scholarship to the Great Western Trail at the beginnings and conclusions of our courses through a systematic, continuous review of international cosmology episode studies helps strengthen the contributions of Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana universities to the intellectual scaffolding we are instantiating into the Great Western Trail.15. A Conclusion to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
15. A Conclusion to Deep Transmitted Cosmologies
For several reasons -- primarily because universities in the middle of the United States have better contributions to make to our understanding of Resilience Leadership than the more settled, elite, well-resourced East Coast and West Coast universities -- we use the Texas universities and the Michigan universities as our windows to the world in the beginning and ending modules of all of our doctoral-level executive education projects. Both of these large groups of universities have had Silicon-Slopes-friendly social networks for us since the 1830s and 1840s (for example, our Chidester ancestors are from Michigan and our Cropper ancestors are from Texas). These are also the only environments in which we worked face-to-face with Dr. Karl E. Weick (at University of Texas from 1985-1987 and at University of Michigan from 1987-1990). Bringing a heavy dose of Texas/Michigan international-level scholarship to the Great Western Trail at the beginnings and conclusions of our courses through a systematic, continuous review of international cosmology episode studies helps strengthen the contributions of Arizona, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana universities to the intellectual scaffolding we are instantiating into the Great Western Trail.
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15. "A Trail Runs through It" Project, Part One: GoogleScholar Citations to Weick (1993) from June 29, 2020, to July 4, 2020:
DEEP TRANSMITTED COSMOLOGIES: Northern Asia (Li, 2020), Southern Asia (???), Scandinavia (Naima Mikkelsen, Gray, and Petersen, 2020; Sweden, 2020), Eastern Europe (???), West/Central Africa (???), East/Southern Africa (???), Mexico/Caribbean/Central America (???), South America (Giordano & Musca, 2020), Northern Western Europe (Schlindwein & Geppert, 2020), Southern Western Europe (Allard-Poesi, 2020; Toubes, Araujo-Vila, 2020; Foglia & Antoine, 2020; Albiol, 2020), Northern Greater Middle East (???), Southern Greater Middle East (???)
Monday, 6/29/20: A Preview of Cultural Sensitivity to Operations: An Appreciation of Ruud's (2020) Study of High-Reliability Educational Organizations. LC Ruud - 2020 -Secondary School Principals' Orientations toward and Uses of Data for Improvement search.proquest.com 32 days ago - This descriptive and multiple case study was designed to explore and understand secondary principals' role orientations and decision-making regarding data, evidence, and research in three urban-suburban called “positive outlier schools”(POS). POS …
Monday, 6/29/20: A Preview of Cultural Sensitivity to Operations: An Appreciation of Brown's (2020) Study of the November 2018 Paradise Fire. A Brown - 2020. " Homesick for Something That's Never Going to Be Again": Redefining Identity and Community after the Camp Fire - scholars.unh.edu 31 days ago - In the context of rapid environmental change and more frequent and severe natural disasters, it is imperative that we understand the impact these disasters have on affected communities, particularly the effects they have on residents' relationships to both …
Tuesday, 6/30/20: A Southern Western Europe Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: An Appreciation of Toubes, Araujo-Vila's (2020) Study of Agile Organizations. DR Toubes, N Araújo-Vila. Young Ideas to Improve Organizational Resilience in Turbulent and Changing Environments. Dynamic Strategic Thinking …, 2020 - igi-global.com 30 days ago - To survive and remain competitive in a constantly changing environment, companies need to develop adaptive capabilities, that is, to become more resilient. Some authors argue that including young employees in the company's decision-making process …
Tuesday, 6/30//20: A Northern Asia Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: An Appreciation of Li's (2020) Study of the 2020 C19 Outbreak PP Li - Organizational resilience for a new normal: Balancing the paradox of global interdependence. Management and Organization Review, 2020 - cambridge.org. 30 days ago -
Wednesday, 7/1/20: A Southern Western Europe Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: An Appreciation of Allard-Poesi's (2020) Study of Qualitative Research Methods in Management. F Allard-Poesi. Des méthodes qualitatives dans la recherche en management cairn.info 29 days ago - La lecture des recherches qualitatives en management dans les journaux scientifiques européens révèle une grande variété de méthodes de collecte (eg, entretien clinique, Harding, 2008; retranscription de réunion, Whittle et al., 2014; observation des …
Wednesday, 7/1/20: A South American Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: An Appreciation of Giordano and Musca's (2020) Study of the Traverse of Mountains in Southern Chile. Y Giordano, G Musca (2020). Explorer l'extrême Conduire un projet de recherche dans cairn.info 29 days ago - Ce chapitre apporte un éclairage sur une expérience singulière: la participation des auteures à une recherche en équipe2 dédiée à l'étude in situ et en temps réel d'une tentative qualifiable d'extrême: le projet de traversée intégrale en 2009 de la …
Thursday, 7/2/20: A Scandinavian Lens on Deep Transmitted Cosmologies: An Appreciation of Naima Mikkelsen, Gray, and Petersen's (2020) Study of Danish Mental Health Care. E Naima Mikkelsen, B Gray, A Petersen (2020). Unconscious processes of organizing: Intergroup conflict in mental health care. Journal of Management … - Wiley Online Library 28 days ago - A critical but overlooked issue in Weick's seminal work, The Social Psychology of Organizing (1969/1979), concerns “the heat” of organizing processes, namely, the underground emotional processes underpinning the organizing of conflictual work …
Friday, 7/3/20: A Northern Western Europe Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies. E Schlindwein, M Geppert (2020). Towards a process model of emotional sensemaking in post-merger integration: linking cognitive and affective dimensions - critical perspectives on international …, 2020 - emerald.com 27 days ago - Purpose The purpose of this paper is to advance micro-level theorising of sociocultural post-merger integration (PMI) by merging insights from international business and management research on the cognitive and affective dimensions of PMI …
Saturday, 7/4/20: A Scandinavian Lens on Deep Received Cosmologies: An Appreciation of a (2020) Study of Sweden's Response to the 2020 C19 Outbreak. ACTING COLLECTIVELY INTELLIGENT UNDER PRESSUREFKEYCTT NEED - hhs.se 26 days ago - In May 2020, over 2 months into the acute COVID-19 crisis, we surveyed a sample of managers about what the crisis had meant to them. 1 Close to 80% stated that they and their work-groups had been confronted with entirely new kinds of challenges and …