Skip to main content
Taylor & Francis Group Logo
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

  • Login
  • Hi, User  
    • Your Account
    • Logout
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.

Book

Complexity and Organizational Reality

Book

Complexity and Organizational Reality

DOI link for Complexity and Organizational Reality

Complexity and Organizational Reality book

Uncertainty and the Need to Rethink Management after the Collapse of Investment Capitalism

Complexity and Organizational Reality

DOI link for Complexity and Organizational Reality

Complexity and Organizational Reality book

Uncertainty and the Need to Rethink Management after the Collapse of Investment Capitalism
ByRalph D. Stacey
Edition 2nd Edition
First Published 2009
eBook Published 18 December 2009
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203863657
Pages 264
eBook ISBN 9780203863657
Subjects Economics, Finance, Business & Industry
Share
Share

Get Citation

Stacey, R.D. (2009). Complexity and Organizational Reality: Uncertainty and the Need to Rethink Management after the Collapse of Investment Capitalism (2nd ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203863657

ABSTRACT

Approaches to leadership and management are still dominated by prescriptions – usually claimed as scientific – for top executives to choose the future direction of their organization. The global financial recession and the collapse of investment capitalism (surely not planned by anyone) make it quite clear that top executives are simply not able to choose future directions. Despite this, current management literature mostly continues to avoid the obvious – management’s inability to predict or control what will happen in the future. The key question now must be how we are to think about management if we take the uncertainty of organizational life seriously.

Ralph Stacey has turned to the sciences of uncertainty and complexity to develop an understanding of leadership and management as the ordinary politics of daily organizational life. In presenting organizations as a series of complex responsive processes, Stacey’s new book helps us to see organizational reality for what it actually is – human beings engaged in many, many local conversational interactions and power relations in which they negotiate their ideologically based choices. Organizational continuity and change emerge unpredictably, rather than as a result of any overall plan. This is a radically different picture from the one painted by most of the management literature, which explains "organizational continuity and change" as the realization of the global plans and choices of a few powerful executives within an organization.

Providing a new foundation for understanding complexity and management, this important book is required reading for managers and leaders wanting to understand the reality of complexity in organizations, including those engaged in postgraduate studies in leadership, organizational behaviour and change management.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|26 pages

Contradiction: Experiencing the reality of uncertainty but still believing that executives choose an organization’s ‘direction’

chapter 2|26 pages

How we came to believe that leaders and managers choose an organization’s direction: professional identifi cation with the sciences of certainty

chapter 3|20 pages

Complexity and the sciences of uncertainty: The importance of local interaction in the emergence of population-wide patterns of continuity and change

chapter 4|23 pages

Complexity and what writers on organizations do with it: Obscuring local interaction and mostly re-presenting the dominant discourse

chapter 5|22 pages

Understanding organizations as games we are pre-occupied in: fi nding ourselves immersed in local interaction and using abstract management tools at the same time

chapter 6|21 pages

Understanding organizations as social processes: The interplay of abstracting and immersing producing outcomes no one chooses

chapter 7|21 pages

Managers accomplish whatever they accomplish in processes of communication

chapter 8|20 pages

Turning the dominant management discourse on its head: organizational continuity and transformation emerging in local interaction rather than being chosen by managers

chapter 9|24 pages

Local and population-wide patterns of power relations and ideology: The dynamics of inclusion and exclusion in organizations

chapter 10|27 pages

Implications of a theory of complex responsive processes for policy making, consultancy, leadership, management, organizational research and management education

T&F logoTaylor & Francis Group logo
  • Policies
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
  • Journals
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
  • Corporate
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
  • Help & Contact
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
  • Connect with us

Connect with us

Registered in England & Wales No. 3099067
5 Howick Place | London | SW1P 1WG © 2021 Informa UK Limited