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ویرایش: نویسندگان: Mark Cole, John Higgins سری: ISBN (شابک) : 2021003154, 9781032033686 ناشر: Routledge سال نشر: 2021 تعداد صفحات: 258 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 6 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Leadership Unravelled: The Faulty Thinking Behind Modern Management به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب رهبری آشکار شد: تفکر معیوب پشت مدیریت مدرن نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Cover\nHalf Title\nTitle Page\nCopyright Page\nTable of Contents\nAcknowledgements\nPreface\nChapter 1: An Introduction… in seven uneasy pieces\n 1.1 The common sense we live by\n 1.2 A superficial connection with reality\n 1.2.1 Parts 1 and 2 in summary\n 1.3 What gets in the way of us stopping and wondering about our world\n 1.3.1 Part 3 in summary\n 1.4 The disappearance of collective sense and sense making\n 1.4.1 Part 4 in summary\n 1.5 The fragmentation of time, busyness, and the disconnected future\n 1.5.1 Part 5 in summary\n 1.6 Paying attention to the headwaters of our thinking\n 1.6.1 Part 6 in summary\n 1.7 What happens next…\n 1.7.1 The five paradoxes\n 1.7.2 The six myths\n 1.7.3 An end to the introduction\n References\nChapter 2: The use and abuse of paradoxes in organisational life\n 2.1 Setting the scene\n 2.2 Starting with the personal in the context of the systemic: the non-inevitability of equilibrium\n 2.3 On the notion of paradox: the game where two irreconcilable propositions co-exist\n 2.4 Paradox in organisational life: how words create worlds and legitimise one-dimensional management\n 2.5 Dismantling five impactful paradoxes: an overview\n 2.5.1 Paradox one: well-beingcontra overbearing busyness\n 2.5.1.1 In brief…\n 2.5.1.2 The paradox in full…\n 2.5.1.2.1 The framing of well-being as being in the service of productivity\n 2.5.1.2.2 The organisational response to workforce disengagement which threatens productivity\n 2.5.1.2.3 Busyness and the penetration of work-think into the home\n 2.5.1.2.4 The intended and unintended consequences of ICT\n 2.5.1.2.5 The imprecision of what is meant by health and well-being\n 2.5.1.2.6 The addiction to persistent, executively framed, programmatic upheaval (aka ‘change’)\n 2.5.2 Some conclusions about paradox one….\n 2.5.3 Paradox two: inclusive compassion contra heroic control\n 2.5.3.1 In brief…\n 2.5.3.2 The paradox in full…\n 2.5.3.2.1 The King is dead! Long live the King! Or so it seems when it comes to leadership practice\n 2.5.3.2.2 How the traditional model is nourished and constructed – and isn’t ‘natural’ at all\n 2.5.3.2.3 The addiction to uncritical action: and the social order it sustains\n 2.5.3.2.4 The distractive ideology of the new language of leadership\n 2.5.4 Some conclusions about paradox two\n 2.5.5 Paradox three: diversity of voice contra enforced homogeneity\n 2.5.5.1 In brief…\n 2.5.5.2 The paradox in full…\n 2.5.5.2.1 How McKinsey occupied the way organisations think (and not in a good way)\n 2.5.5.2.2 Diversity seen through a mechanistic lens of supporting creativity and innovation\n 2.5.5.2.3 Critiquing what is taken to be ‘bleeding obvious’\n 2.5.5.2.4 The just organisation in a just society… values in conflict\n 2.5.5.2.5 Freedom on a short leash… the lure of totalitarianism\n 2.5.6 Some conclusions about paradox three…\n 2.5.7 Paradox four: authenticity contra part of the superstructure\n 2.5.7.1 In brief…\n 2.5.7.2 The paradox in full…\n 2.5.7.2.1 The discipline of the observed self (in a crowd)\n 2.5.7.2.2 The failure of the authentic self to be other than a tool of a system\n 2.5.7.2.3 Validating the authentic leader at work\n 2.5.7.2.4 The market economy of authenticity and its truth\n 2.5.7.2.5 Can the watched (‘hailed’) self ever be authentic?\n 2.5.7.2.6 The silencing of the unedited voice\n 2.5.8 Some conclusions about paradox four…\n 2.5.9 Paradox five: all to be heard contra the privileging of extraversion\n 2.5.9.1 In brief…\n 2.5.9.2 The paradox in full…\n 2.5.9.2.1 The work of meetings (or meetings, bloody meetings…)\n 2.5.9.2.2 The pleasure of exercising power and/or belonging\n 2.5.9.2.3 The curse of thoughtfulness\n 2.5.9.2.4 The silencing effects of hierarchy – and its subversion\n 2.5.9.2.5 Let’s talk about ethnicity and gender\n 2.5.10 Some conclusions about paradox five\n 2.5.11 What lies beneath… some conclusions about paradox in the workplace\n 2.5.11.1 In brief… as an overview of the review of the five paradoxes\n 2.5.11.2 In brief… an overview for each paradox\n 2.6 A concluding commentary\n References\nChapter 3: The six myths of management (thinking)\n 3.1 Setting the scene for the six myths and why challenging them can be unpopular\n 3.2 What are the six myths that create the seemingly unbreakable boundaries of our management and leadership thinking?\n 3.3 The first myth: all is fixable\n 3.4 The second myth: perfection is the only state worth pursuing\n 3.5 The third myth: there is a right way of doing things\n 3.6 The fourth myth: metrics reflect an objective reality\n 3.7 The fifth myth: values bind the organisation\n 3.8 The sixth myth: we’re all in it together\n 3.9 What are the implications of the six myths… and what can we do about it?\n 3.10 The implications of the first myth that ‘All is fixable’… and what we can do about it\n 3.11 A concluding commentary on what can be done with the ‘All is fixable’ myth\n 3.12 The implications of the second myth that ‘Perfection is the only state worth pursuing’… and what we can do about it\n 3.13 A concluding commentary on what can be done with the ‘Perfection is the only state worth pursuing’ myth\n 3.14 The implications of the third myth that ‘There is a right way of doing things’… and what we can do about it\n 3.15 A concluding commentary on what can be done with the ‘There is a right way of doing things’ myth\n 3.16 The implications of the fourth myth that ‘Metrics reflect an objective reality’… and what we can do about it\n 3.17 A concluding commentary on the ‘Metrics reflect an objective reality’ myth\n 3.18 The implications of the fifth myth that ‘Values bind the organisation’… and what we can do\n 3.19 A concluding commentary on the ‘Values bind the organisation’ myth\n 3.20 The implications of the sixth myth that ‘We’re all in this together’… and what we can do about it\n 3.21 A concluding commentary on the ‘We’re all in this together’ myth\n 3.22 In conclusion… reframing the six myths\n 3.23 Postscript\n Notes\n References\nIndex