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Management Practices in High-Tech Environments

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Hurshey USA Information Science Reference (IGI Global) 2008Description: 407pISBN:
  • 9781599045641
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 658 JEM
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Item type Current library Item location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Book Reference Book NIMA Knowledge Centre 6th Floor Silence Zone Reference 658 JEM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan M0024841
Total holds: 0

Section I: The High-Tech Workplace Chapter I: “Boundary-spanning” Practices and Paradoxes Related to Trust Among People and Machines in a High-Tech Oil and Gas Environment Vidar Hepsø, Statoil Research and Technology, Norway Chapter II: The Information Society: A Global Discourse and its Local Translation into Regional Organizational Practices Ester Barinaga, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Chapter III: High-Tech Workers, Management Strategy, and Globalization Jasmine Folz, Seattle Central Community College, USA Chapter IV: Language Norms and Debate in Hybrid Research Organizations Kate Hayes, University of Western Sydney, Australia Anneke Fitzgerald, University of Western Sydney, Australia Section II: The Knowledge Worker Chapter V: High-Tech Meets End-User Marc Steen, TNO Information & Communication Technology, The Netherlands Chapter VI: Professional Dimension of IT Specialists’ Social Role Agnieszka Postula, University of Warsaw, Poland Chapter VII: Employee Turnover in the Business Process Outsourcing Industry in India Aruna Ranganathan, Cornell University, USA Sarosh Kuruvilla, Cornell University, USA Chapter VIII: Old and New Timings in a High-Tech Firm Pauline Gleadle, The Open University, UK Chapter IX: Trustworthiness as an Impression Dominika Latusek, Kozminski Business School, Poland Section III: Workplace Relations and Power Chapter X: Social Relations and Knowledge Management Theory and Practice Marie-Josée Legault, Téluq-UQAM, Canada Chapter XI: “We Make Magic Here”: Exploring Social and Cultural Practices within a Global Software Organization in India Marisa D’Mello, University of Oslo, Norway Chapter XII: Outsourcing in High-Tech Corporations: Voices of Dissent, Resistance, and Complicity in a Computer Programming Community Eric Piñeiro, Royal Institute of Technology of Stockholm, Sweden Peter Case, University of the West of England, UK Chapter XIII: Power and Ethics in IS Evaluation José-Rodrigo Córdoba, University of Hull, UK Wendy Robson, University of Hull, UK Chapter XIV: Critical Insights into NHS Information Systems Deployment Rajneesh Chowdhury, CHR Global Consulting Services, India Alan Nobbs, National Health Service, UK Chapter XV: Managerial Image, Social Capital, and Risk in a Czech Engineering Enterprise Ben Passmore,University System of Maryland, USA Section IV: Self Management Chapter XVI: Self-Entrepreneurial Careers: Current Management Practices in Swiss ICT Work Elisabeth K. Kelan, London Business School, UK Chapter XVII: Reflections on Organizing and Managing in Self-Managed Knowledge-Work Teams: A Constructionist Turn James J. Keenan, Fairfield University, USA Chapter XVIII: The Entrepreneurial Constitution of High-Tech Work Environments Maria Aggestam, Lund University, Sweden Chapter XIX: Identifying Flexibilities Marja-Liisa Trux, Helsinki School of Economics, Finland Chapter XX: Disciplining Innovation? Mobile Information Artefacts in a Telco Innovation Center Chris Russell, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, UK

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