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The Dark Side: Critical Cases on the Downside of Business

  • 1.  The Dark Side: Critical Cases on the Downside of Business

    Posted 06-26-2009 06:34
    LIMITED PRE-PUBLICATION OFFER: 20% DISCOUNT

    The Dark Side
    Critical Cases on the Downside of Business
    Edited by Emmanuel Raufflet and Albert J. Mills

    List price: GBP24.95 / EUR37.80 / USD45.00. Limited offer: GBP19.96 /
    EUR30.00 / USD36.00.
    (not including postage and packing). Offer ends 31st July. More details:
    http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/productdetail.kmod?productid=2905

    Despite the availability of many case studies on business best
    practice with regard to social and environmental issues, when
    educators look for resources to illustrate to students the more
    typical cases, let alone the really scandalous practices of the worst
    firms, the cupboard is almost entirely bare. But there is a critical
    need for business educators to expose students and managers to these
    issues to understand the different multifaceted phenomena of our late
    capitalist era.

    We announce the publication on 3rd August of "The Dark Side: Critical
    Cases on the Downside of Business". Pre-order your copy before that
    date and receive 20% discount. Your copy will be shipped as a priority
    immediately upon publication.


    Electronic inspection copies will be available from mid-July. You can
    reserve a copy by filling in this form:
    http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/requesttitles.asp?type=inspectioncopies&add=2905
    ----------------------------
    The Dark Side
    Critical Cases on the Downside of Business
    Edited by Emmanuel Raufflet and Albert J. Mills
    304 pp | 234 x 156 mm | hardback | ISBN 978-1-906093-20-4 | Published
    3 August 2009
    List price: £24.95 €37.50 US$36.00

    ORDER ONLINE AND RECEIVE 20% DISCOUNT
    Offer ends 31st July 2009:
    http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/add_getquantity.kmod?productid=2905

    You can also request a review copy
    http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/requesttitles.asp?type=reviewcopies&add=2905

    or an inspection/desk copy
    http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/requesttitles.asp?type=inspectioncopies&add=2905

    The discredit of a certain brand of capitalism – and the managers that
    practice it – continues apace. The increasing lack of tolerance for
    short-term thinking and a systematic neglect of the social,
    regulatory, and economic conditions in which business ought to operate
    means we are entering a time of trouble and questions – an era of
    economic, social, and environmental turbulence.

    There is a critical need for business educators and trainers to expose
    students and managers to these issues to examine, explore, and
    understand the different multifaceted, complex phenomena of our late
    capitalist era. There is also a need to foster a climate for future
    and current business managers to reflect, feel, and think differently
    both ethically and cognitively. The 16 innovative case studies in "The
    Dark Side: Critical Cases on the Downside of Business" are designed
    for this very purpose: to provoke reflection and debate; to challenge
    and change perceptions; and to create responsible managers.

    The cases are innovative in two ways. First, in terms of content they
    acknowledge the diversity of actors and interests in and around
    organizations. They contain different levels of analysis, and propose
    different points of view and logics. They recognize that decisions
    that seem sound when they are made may actually contain the seeds of
    their later failure. Second, these cases are innovative in terms of
    format. Whereas most cases are formatted around decision-making
    situations, these are more diverse and open-ended. This stimulates the
    use of judgment – the capacity to synthesize, integrate, and balance
    short- and long-term effects, appreciate effects on different groups,
    and learn to listen and evaluate. Whereas decision-making is the key
    skill when confronting complicated issues and situations, judgment-
    making relies on experience and is a far better tool in the complex,
    murky, gray areas typical of business ethics.

    The cases included here are all finalists or award-winners from the
    first seven years of the "Dark Side of Business Case Competition", a
    joint event of the Academy of Management's Critical Management Studies
    Section and Management Education Section. In many areas of management,
    case studies are almost exclusively devoted to "best practice" cases
    or difficult decisions faced by basically well-managed firms. When
    educators look for resources to illustrate to students the more
    typical cases, let alone the really scandalous practices of the worst
    firms, the cupboard is almost entirely bare. From the beginning, the
    Dark Side competition aimed at encouraging case studies that integrate
    socio-political issues with organizational dynamics, thus
    contextualizing organizational and management problems within the
    broader system of capitalism.

    These cases comprise a diverse and rich collection from a range of
    countries, continents, and issues and focus on interactions in
    business organizations as well as between business organizations and
    groups and societies. "The Dark Side: Critical Cases on the Downside
    of Business" is divided into four sections. The first sheds light on
    gray areas in the behavior of businesses. The second concerns the
    interactions between business and local communities in diverse
    countries. The third concerns crises, and specifically how firms may
    create or manage them. Finally, the fourth section concerns gray areas
    in business behavior in the global context.

    Teaching notes for all of the cases will be available free of charge
    to educators from the publisher.

    "The Dark Side: Critical Cases on the Downside of Business" will be an
    essential purchase for educators and is expected to be a widely used
    resource at all levels of management education.

    CONTENTS

    Introduction: the case for "critical" cases
    Emmanuel Raufflet and Albert Mills


    1. Gray areas in the behavior of businesses

    1.1 Leading the team out of the hazing blues yonder: the case of the
    Windsor Spitfire hockey team
    Francine K. Schlosser

    1.2 John Hamilton's work and eldercare dilemma. Break the silence?
    Sustain the silence?
    Rosemary A. McGowan

    1.3 Hugh Connerty and Hooters: what is successful entrepreneurship?
    Mary Godwyn

    1.4 Antiquorum Auctioneers: building brands on ignorance?
    Benoit Leleux

    1.5 The international career opportunity: from dream to nightmare in
    eight weeks
    Matt Bladowski and Rosemary A. McGowan


    2. Business and local communities

    2.1 Food Lion vs. the UFCW: time for a change?
    Paul Michael Swiercz

    2.2 Manipulation, placation, partnership, or delegated power: can
    community and business really work together when surface-mining comes
    to town?
    Sherry Finney

    2.3 The smell of power: Yves Rocher in La Gacilly, France
    Emmanuel Raufflet and Monique Le Chene

    2.4 Who is responsible for the squatter camps? Mining companies in
    South Africa and the challenge of local collaboration
    Ralph Hamann


    3. Creating (or managing) crises

    3.1 The Westray Mine explosion
    Caroline J. O'Connell and Albert J. Mills

    3.2 The story behind the water in Walkerton, Ontario
    Elizabeth A. McLeod and Jean Helms Mills

    3.3 Dark territory: the Graniteville chlorine spill
    Jill A. Brown and Ann K. Buchholtz


    4. Gray areas in the global context

    4.1 The dark side of water: a struggle for access and control
    Latha Poonamallee and Anita Howard

    4.2 Mattel Inc.: lead-tainted toys
    Adenekan (Nick) Dedeke and Martin Calkins

    4.3 Google, Inc.: figuring out how to deal with China
    Anne T. Lawrence

    4.4 Genocide in Rwanda: leadership, ethics, and organisational
    "failure" in a post-colonial context
    Brad S. Long, Jim Grant, Albert J. Mills, Ellen Rudderham-Gaudet, and
    Amy Warren
    ORDER ONLINE AND RECEIVE 20% DISCOUNT
    Offer ends 31st July 2009.


    For further information, contact:

    Jayney Bown
    Greenleaf Publishing
    Aizlewood Business Centre
    Aizlewood's Mill
    Sheffield S3 8GG
    UK
    Tel: +44 (0)114 282 3475
    Fax: +44 (0)114 282 3476
    sales@greenleaf-publishing.com
    www.greenleaf-publishing.com

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