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Participative Management and Culture

A Qualitative and Integrative Study in Five European Countries

by Erna Szabo (Author)
©2007 Postdoctoral Thesis XVIII, 338 Pages

Summary

This qualitative cross-cultural study explores and compares the meaning, enactment and context of participative management in five European countries. The study takes a holistic perspective and integrates the findings into existing research. Elements of the Grounded Theory method characterise the study’s methodological approach, which includes theme-focused interviews with managers from the Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Poland and Sweden. The results suggest distinct country-specific models of participative management. Decision type, time-related issues and conflict are the factors which most prominently influence the use of participation. The findings are further characterised by convergence as well as divergence among the five countries under study.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 338
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631556191
Language
English
Keywords
Mitteleuropa Entscheidungsprozess Mitarbeiter Partizipation Internationaler Vergleich Grounded Theory Führungsentscheidung Interkulturelles Management
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. XVIII, 338 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Erna Szabo (Author)

The Author: Erna Szabo is a member of the Department of International Management at Johannes Kepler University (JKU) Linz (Austria). She received her doctorate from JKU and an MBA from the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto. She has a business background in the areas of information technology and consulting. Her research focus is in organisational culture, leadership and cross-cultural management, as well as in the combined use of qualitative and quantitative methodology to study complex organisational phenomena.

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Title: Participative Management and Culture