Beyond Intractability: A Free Knowledge Base on More Constructive Approaches to Destructive Conflict
Abstract of "Managing Organizational Change: A Multiple Perspectives Approach" by Ian Palmer, Richard Dunford and Gib Akin
Citation: Palmer, Ian, Richard Dunford and Gib Akin. Managing Organizational Change: A Multiple Perspectives Approach. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005.
This Abstract written by: Publisher Description
Managing Organizational Change, by Palmer/Dunford/Akin, provides managers with an awareness of the issues involved in managing change, moving them beyond "one-best way" approaches and providing them with access to multiple perspectives that they can draw upon in order to enhance their success in producing organizational change. These multiple perspectives provide a theme for the text as well as a framework for the way each chapter outlines different options open to managers in helping them to identify, in a reflective way, the actions and choices open to them. The authors favor using multiple perspectives to ensure that change managers are not trapped by a "one-best way" of approaching change which limits their options for action. Changing organizations is as messy as it is exhilarating, as frustrating as it is satisfying, as muddling-through and creative a process as it is a rational one. This book recognizes these tensions for those involved in managing organizational change. Rather than pretend that they do not exist it confronts them head on, identifying why they are there, how they can be managed and the limits they create for what the manager of organizational change can achieve.
Where all think alike, no one thinks very much. -- Walter Lippmann
Featured Links Organizations Making Noteworthy Contributions to Efforts to Promote More Constructive Conflict National Peace Corps Association
Other Resources from Beyond Intractability Red State/ Blue State: US Political Polarization Though US politics has long been divided along ideological lines, the last two presidential elections have created increased polarization between liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans. How did this happen? Is it good for the country? Can anything be done to reunited us?
Nobel Peace Prize Winners
Emily Green Balch Former International President of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and 1946 Nobel Peace Laureate
The Beyond Intractability Knowledge Base Project Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess, Co-Directors and Editors c/o Conflict Information Consortium(Formerly Conflict Research Consortium), University of Colorado Campus Box 580, Boulder, CO 80309 Phone: (303) 492-1635; Fax: (303) 492-2154; Contact