Management education in historical perspective

書誌事項

Management education in historical perspective

Lars Engwall and Vera Zamagni, editors

Manchester University Press, 1998

  • : hardback

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 18

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-171) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The role of the Congress is essential to any study of American government and politics. It would be impossible to gain a complete understanding of the American system of government without an appreciation of the nature and workings of this essential body. This text looks at the workings of the United States Congress, and uses the Republican period of ascendancy, which lasted from 1994 until 2000, as an example of how the Congress works in practice. The book illustrates the basic principles of Congress using contemporary and recent examples, while also drawing attention to the changes that took place in the 1990s. The period of Republican control is absent from many of the standard texts and is of considerable academic interest for a number of reasons, not least the 1994 election, the budget deadlock in 1995 and the Clinton impeachment scandal of 1999. The book traces the origin and development of the United States Congress, before looking in depth at the role of representatives and senators, the committee system, parties in Congress, and the relationship between Congress and the President, the media and interest groups. -- .

目次

  • Introduction, Lars Engwall, Vera Zamagni
  • The German Handelshochschulen 1898-1933 - a new departure in management education and why it failed, Heinz-Dieter Meyer
  • British and Italian management education before the Second World War - a comparative analysis, Francesca Fauri
  • The big push - the export of American business to Western Europe after the Second World War, Jacqueline MacGlade
  • The making of Viking leaders -perspectives on Nordic management education, Lars Engwall
  • The hidden business schools - management training in German since 1945, Mattias Kipping
  • Management education in postwar Britain, Nick Tiratsoo
  • The "enclosure" effect - innovation without standardisation in Italian post-war management education, Giuliana Gemelli
  • Mistaking an historical phenomenon for a functional one - post-war management education reconsidered, Robert Locke.

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