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The Organization of the Expert Society makes the argument that current organizing initiatives in the expert society are based in an objectifying view of expertise that risks concealing and downplaying key aspects of expertise. Well-intended organizing initiatives in the expert society thus run the risk of promoting ignorance rather than securing expertise.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. The Contemporary Expert Society
Staffan Furusten and Andreas Werr
2. Experts without Rules – Scrutinizing the Unregulated Free Zone of the Management Consultants
Susanna Alexiusi
3. Constructing Expertise in the Business of Certification Auditing
Kristina Tamm Hallström
4. Stock Analysts – Experts of the Financial Sector
Jesper Blomberg
5. As Flies around Goodies – The Rise of Experts and Services in the Emerging Field of CSR and Sustainability
Susanna Alexius, Staffan Furusten and Andreas Werr
6. On Experts in Marketing: Who’s in the Driver’s Seat and What’s Love Got to Do With It?
Claudia A. Rademaker, Patrik Nilsson and Richard Wahlund
7. Organizing Counter-Expertise: Critical Professional Communities in Transnational Governance
Sigrid Quack
8. Disembedding Expertise: The Shift from Relational to Formalized Purchasing Practices
Lovisa Näslund and Frida Pemer
9. Organizing Expertise through Improvising
Staffan Furusten
10. Expertise in the Selection of Employees
Pernilla Bolander
11. Expressions of Expertise
Annika Schilling
12. Career Factory and Expert House – Two Development Environments for Experts
Andreas Werr and Annika Schilling
13. Organizing Expertise in the Professional Service Firm –Meritocracy in Theory and Practice
Savita Kumra and Andreas Werr
14. Leading Those Who Know Best
Ingalill Holmberg and Mats Tyrstrup
15. Organizing in the Contemporary Expert Society – Organizers, Organizing Attempts and Emerging Orders
Staffan Furusten and Andreas Werr
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Staffan Furusten is an Associate Professor at the Department of Management and Organization at the Stockholm School of Economics (SSE), and the director of the Stockholm Centre for Organization Research (SCORE), an interdisciplinary research centre run jointly by SSE and Stockholm University, Sweden.
Andreas Werr is a Professor at the Stockholm School of Economics (SSE) and Head of its Department of Management and Organization. He is also Head of the Center for HRM and Knowledge work at the SSE institute for Research, Sweden.
Zusammenfassung
The Organization of the Expert Society makes the argument that current organizing initiatives in the expert society are based in an objectifying view of expertise that risks concealing and downplaying key aspects of expertise. Well-intended organizing initiatives in the expert society thus run the risk of promoting ignorance rather than securing expertise.