2013/2014 KAN-CMF_MCCW Managerial Challenges in Contemporary Worklife
English Title | |
Managerial Challenges in Contemporary Worklife |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | Fourth Quarter |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Max. participants | 70 |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc/MSc in Business Administration and
Philosophy, MSc
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Course coordinator | |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 08-07-2013 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Examination | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | |||||||||||||||||||||
The aim of the course is to provide
students with knowledge about the managerial challenges in
contemporary work-life. The main thesis put forward in the course
is that these managerial challenges can be framed as a question of
how to manage self-managing employees. In a broad sense,
self-management require that employees think, feel and act in ways
that contribute to the realization and improvement of the
individual worker, but only insofar as they concomitantly
anticipate and contribute to the various needs of the organization.
However this creates new challenges for employees and managers
alike. The course will confront these (self-)-managerial challenges
along four empirical cases with the following themes: performance
management, employee commitment, professionalism and work-life
balance/stress. The student will learn to analyze and understand
these cases and their related themes in light of various primarily
philosophical concepts such as freedom, craftsmanship, cynicism,
ideology and desire. All in an effort to understand the managerial
opportunities’ and challenges self-managing employees brings about
in contemporary work-life.
COURSE OUTLINE Week I: Management of self-management Week II: Performance Management and freedom Week III: Professionalism and craftsmanship Week IV: Commitment and cynicism Week V: Work-life balance, stress and desire |
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||||||
Class time will include lectures, and discussion groups in which students will explore theoretical perspectives and apply them to specific cases. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||||||
Lopdrup-Hjorth, T. Gudmand-Høyer, M.
Bramming, P. and Pedersen, M. (2011) Governing work through
self-management Ephemera 11(2) 97-104
Drucker, P (1999): ’Knowledge-worker productivity’, i California Management Review. 41(2) 79-94 Costea, B., Crump, N. and Amiridis, K. (2008): Managerialism, the therapeutic habitus and the self in contemporary Organizing, Human Relations61, 661-686 Rose, N (1999) Freedom, i Powers of Freedom – reframing political thought. Cambridge University Press 67-97 Maravelias, C. (2007): Freedom at Work in the Age of Post-Bureaucratic Organization. ephemera7(4) 555-574 Casey, C. (1999): Come Join Our Family: Discipline and Integration in Corporate Organizational Culture. Human Relations.Vol. 52, No.2 155-178 Kunda, G. and Van Maanen, J.M. (1999)Changing Scripts at Work: Managers and ProfessionalsThe ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 561: 64-68 Pedersen, M. (2011): ‘A career is nothing without a personal life’ – on the social machine in the call for authentic employees. ephemera 11(1) 63-77 Deleuze, G (2006): Desire and Pleasure, Two Regimes of Madness. Semiotext(e) Foreign Agent Series. 122-134 Smith, D (2007): Deleuze and the Question of Desire: Towards An Immanent Theory of Ethics. Parrhesia 2 66-78 Muhr, S. L. and Kirkegaard (2012): ‘The Dream Consultant: productive fantasies at work’. Culture and organization. 1-19, Ifirst article. Zizek, S (1999) The Sublime Object of Ideology. Verso. 29-43 Walton, R.E. (1985): From control to commitment in the workplace. Harvard Business Review, Vol. 63 No.2, pp. 77-84. Lazzarato, M. (2004): From Capital-Labour to Capital-Life. Ephemera 4(3)187-208 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 4(3)187-208 Pedersen, M (2008): Tune in, break down and reboot: new machines for coping with the stress of commitment’, Culture and organization, 14 (2): 171‐185 McDonnell, A and P. Gunnigle (2009). Performance Management, In Collings, W. D. and G. Wood (eds.) Human Resource Management – a critical approach. Routledge. 189-207 Foucault, M (1997): The ethics of the concern of the self as a practice of freedom. In Rabinow. P. (ed.) Michel Foucault essential works of Foucault 1954-1984 ethics volume 1. Penguin Books. 281-291 Gorz, A (2010) Immaterial Labour.The Immaterial. Seagull Books. 1-33 Boswell, W. R., Bingham, J.B and Colvin, Alexander. (2006) Aligning employees through “line of sight”. Business Horizons 499-509 Townley, B (1995 ): ‘Know Thyself’: Self-awareness, Self-formation and Managing. Organization2(2) 271-289 Guest, D. (2002): Perspectives on the study of work-life balance. Social Science Information41(2), 255-279 |
Last updated on
08-07-2013