Organisations and Humanisation

£44.99

Organisations and Humanisation

Perspectives on organising humanisation and humanising organisations

Library and information sciences / Museology Social and ethical issues Sociology Business strategy International business Knowledge management Personnel and human resources management Production and quality control management Sales and marketing management Sales and marketing Organizational theory and behaviour Ethics and moral philosophy Social and political philosophy Engineering: general Ergonomics

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Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 23rd June 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 522 Kb

ISBN: 9781317085119


Introduction to Humanisation

The term humanisation was introduced in humanistic studies to develop a humanist way of thinking about organisations and human relations. It stems from a need to think about questions of justice and living a good life in practice but not from some absolute or abstract point of view. As it is often framed, humanisation is concerned with working towards a more human type of organisation.

Organisation Studies and Humanisation Theories

Organisation studies are concerned with understanding organisations and their role in our society, and developing perspectives and methods to improve them, while humanisation theories, on the other hand, do not represent a managerial blueprint as they tend to incorporate notions of situated knowledge, sense-making and relational value, drawing our attention to specific processes rather than offering universal truths. Although Critical Management Studies counters mainstream managerialism, it still tends to produce the same kind of ‘truths’ that are supposed to apply to all organisations.

Management Literature and Humanisation

Much of the existing management literature is related to control and offers strategies on how to do things but this is not about prescriptions, rather how to explore possibilities from both theoretical and practical perspectives. It offers managers as well as theoreticians of organisations the possibility to question their grounding principles. In the variety of contributions to this book the authors reflect on their understanding of what it is to be human and whether this can be found in the way that organisations are run. They consider the value of humanisation to understand and intervene in organisations and the challenges they face.

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