Konference på CBS
Microfoundations of Organizational Capabilities and Knowledge Processes - Microfoundations of Organizational Capabilities and Knowledge Processes
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Notions of routines, capabilities, knowledge, and learning abound in management studies and social science, particularly in such fields as organization studies and strategic management (where the “capabilities-based view” is now dominant). Capabilities are collective level constructs that refer to firm-specific knowledge that is said to be collectively held.
The purpose of this two-day conference is to bring together a group of world-class scholars from several related disciplines - business, economics, sociology, philosophy, communications - to discuss the micro-macro link in knowledge and capabilities and related knowledge processes as they relate to social theory and strategic management.
Among the topics that the speakers will address are:
- What is the locus of knowledge?
- What are the origins of organizational capabilities and knowledge?
- What are key processes of knowledge creation or learning both at the individual and collective levels?
- Does learning emerge as a function of interaction with the environment and past experience (as suggested by Cyert & March, 1963) - what specifically are the underlying theoretical mechanisms?
- When building micro-foundations, what behavioral models do we (can we) make use of?
- Does the notion of bounded rationality easily transfer between individual and collective levels?
- How do we aggregate from individual to the collective level knowledge? Can we make use of “invisible hand-explanations”?
- What about the rationalist – behaviorist debate – where does social theory stand?
- While empiricist/behaviorist assumptions and approaches dominate the dialogue in organization science – from a philosophical perspective – are rationalist approaches feasible?
- Disciplines such as psychology, linguistics, and philosophy are moving toward more ‘internalist’ and cognitivist approaches to learning – what are the implications of a rationalist agenda of knowledge on organization science?
- No particular academic discipline has a monopoly on the constructs of learning and knowledge – what are unique/new insights coming from our respective disciplines in relation to others? Are we simply recycling concepts and theory between disciplines?
- What are the points of overlap between social theorists and organizational scholars with regard to the micro-macro link?
- The social sciences – for example, economics (Menger 1883; Arrow 1951) and sociology (Coleman 1990) – have always struggled with the micro-macro link, or individual-collective relationship – are there promising efforts/research, which begin to address this gap in organization science, sociology or other disciplines?
Speakers
A number of distinguished speakers will give presentations, among them the following keynote speakers:
The conference takes place
01.12
2005,
10.00
- 02.12
2005, 17.00
Adresse:
Copenhagen Business School
Solbjerg Plads 3
Auditorium SPs 8
DK-2000 Frederiksberg
Sidst opdateret af Helle Damgaard Andersen, Yvonne Borkelmann 27.11.2005