The chapters in this volume (and the companion volume) seek to establish boundary conditions for important organizational constructs and processes.
This volume of the Research in Organizational Sciences is entitled "Received Wisdom, Kernels of Truth, and Boundary Conditions in Organizational Studies".
The authors seek to reset the received wisdom about meta-analysis, so it serves the purpose of telling a vivid story that summarizes existing literature, yet encourages new primary studies in a research arena.
Introduction UNTRUTH: A PRIMER John Kenneth Galbraith, the economist and writer, coined the phrase conventional wisdom more than four decades ago in his 1958 bestselling book, The Affluent Society. As Galbraith defined it, ...
Questions the reasoning behind Western images of the environmental destruction taking place in Africa.
McClary, "offers an analysis of our own cultural moment in terms of two dominant traditions: tonality and blues."--Jacket.
This work questions the reasoning behind Western images of the environmental destruction taking place in Africa. It asks how environmental orthodoxies become established, and what the alternative and appropriate approaches...
For an excellent review of voter fraud in the 1800s, see Peter H. Argersinger, βNew Perspectives on Election Fraud in the Gilded Age,β Political Science Quarterly 100 (Winter 1985β1986): 669β87.
This book examines whether the 2016 presidential election challenged conventional wisdom in political science or strengthened current theories.
The new model for business and personal relationships based on the simple yet profound principle of mentoring--both giving and receiving knowledge in a creative mutual exchange.