Re-imagining management education in post-WWII Britain: views from government and business

被引:6
|
作者
Larson, Mitchell J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cent Lancashire, Lancashire Sch Business & Enterprise, Greenbank Bldg, Preston PR1 2HE, Lancs, England
关键词
Management education; United Kingdom; business schools; managers;
D O I
10.1080/17449359.2020.1746346
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
This paper questions what British management education promoters sought to create through their efforts to establish high-level business training institutes in Britain in the 1960s. In response to the landmark Robbins Report of 1963, businessmen and politicians re-imagined management education and in doing so formed a new type of management education institute to operate alongside, and ultimately to compete with, a wide variety of other methods of management preparation then in use in the country. As business conditions changed and firms - especially large ones - grew more complex, both business leaders and government ministers sought ways to prepare the next generation of managers to lead firms successfully in the long term but do so in a way that satisfied their own firms' needs as well as those of society. Using both archival and published sources, the text explores the perspectives of those involved with the business school project as well as those interested in it as observers to determine what business leaders and government truly wanted from Britain's future managers.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 191
页数:23
相关论文
共 17 条
  • [1] Learning atmospheres: Re-imagining management education through the derive
    Michels, Christoph
    Hindley, Clare N.
    Knowles, Deborah
    Ruth, Damian William
    [J]. MANAGEMENT LEARNING, 2020, 51 (05) : 559 - 578
  • [2] From barter to monetary economy Ordoliberal views on the post-WWII German economic order
    Fevre, Raphael
    [J]. WAR IN THE HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT: ECONOMISTS AND THE QUESTION OF WAR, 2018, : 218 - 238
  • [3] Disrupting Privilege as Power and Control: Re-Imagining Business and the Appreciation of Indigenous Stewardship in Management Education Curricula
    Young-Ferris, Anna
    Voola, Ranjit
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION, 2023, 47 (01) : 135 - 153
  • [4] The Post-Pandemic Central Business District (CBD): Re-Imagining the Creative City?
    Gibson, Chris
    Brennan-Horley, Chris
    Cook, Nicole
    McGuirk, Pauline
    Warren, Andrew
    Wolifson, Peta
    [J]. URBAN POLICY AND RESEARCH, 2023, 41 (02) : 210 - 223
  • [5] From individual to corporate praxis: A systemic re-imagining of religious education
    Fleischer, BJ
    [J]. RELIGIOUS EDUCATION, 2004, 99 (03) : 316 - 333
  • [6] Re-imagining the places and landscapes of English education: Conversations from the field
    Kooy, M
    [J]. CURRICULUM INQUIRY, 2000, 30 (04) : 473 - 487
  • [7] Government aid and child refugees' economic success later in life: Evidence from post-WWII GDR refugees
    Black, Sandra E.
    Liepmann, Hannah
    Remigereau, Camille
    Spitz-Oener, Alexandra
    [J]. LABOUR ECONOMICS, 2022, 75
  • [8] Re-imagining the image of the educator in post-secondary early childhood education: calling for epistemic justice
    Davies, Adam W. J.
    Richardson, Brooke
    Abawi, Zuhra
    [J]. PEDAGOGY CULTURE AND SOCIETY, 2024, 32 (04): : 1013 - 1031
  • [9] Re-Imagining Approaches to Learning and Teaching: Youth and Community Work Education Post COVID-19
    Curran, Sheila
    Gormally, Sinead
    Smith, Christine
    [J]. EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2022, 12 (03):
  • [10] FROM WEB X.0 TO UNIVERSITY X.0: RE-IMAGINING EDUCATION
    Logofatu, Mihai
    Logofatu, Cristian
    [J]. QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY IN E-LEARNING, VOL 3, 2013, : 231 - 236