Organizational Communication and Management

A Global Perspective

Edited by Andrzej Kozminski & Donald P. Cushman

Subjects: International Business
Series: SUNY series, Human Communication Processes
Paperback : 9780791413067, 234 pages, January 1993
Hardcover : 9780791413050, 234 pages, January 1993

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Table of contents

Preface

I. INTRODUCTION

1. The Rise of Global Communication and Global Management: An Overview
Andrzej K. Kozminski and Donald P. Cushman

II. GLOBALIZATION AND THE EMERGENCE OF REGIONAL CORE MARKETS

2. The United States and Canada as a Core Market Culture, Manufacturing, and Industrial Strategy
Scott Olson

3. The European Economic Community as a Core Market: Diverse Cultures and Perspectives
Krzystof Obloj

4. East Asia as a Core Market: The Japanese Strategy
Yanan Ju

5. A Framework for Understanding Eastern Europe's Problems in Integrating into the Global Economy
Andrzej K. Kozminski and Krzystof Obloj

III. GLOBALIZATION: A COMMUNICATION AND MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVE

6. Visions of Order: High-Speed Management in the Private Sector of the Global Marketplace
Donald P. Cushman and Sarah S. King

7. Telecommunication and National Sovereignty in the Twenty-First Century
Herbert S. Dordick

8. Human Resource and Work-Force Management in the Global Marketplace
Rowland G. Baughman

9. The Diffusion of Technology
Stefan Kwiatkowski

IV. GLOBALIZATION--SOME LOCAL PERSPECTIVES

10. The Scandinavian Countries in the Global Economy
Pat Joynt

11. The Role of Subnational Governments in Global Economic Development: A Focus on the United State
Richard L. Pattenaude

12. Communication and Cultural Change: A Japanese Perspective on Globalization
Youichi Ito

13. Hyperinflation and Stabilization in Poland
Marian Gorski

V. CONCLUSION

14. Global Management--A New Road to Social Progress?
Andrzej K. Kozminski

Contributors

Notes

References

Index

Andrzej K. Kozminski is Professor of Management and Chair of Management and Organization at the School of Management, Warsaw University, Warsaw, Poland; Director at the Warsaw University Post Graduate International Management Center; and President of the International Business School in Warsaw. He is the co-author and editor of fifteen books in Polish, Hungarian and Czech. Donald P. Cushman is Professor of Communication at the State University of New York at Albany. He is the co-author, with Dudley D. Cahn, of Communication in Interpersonal Relationships; and co-editor of Political Communication: Engineering Visions of Order in the Socialist World, both published by SUNY Press.

Reviews

"The role of communication, in general, and high speed management in particular in the new global economy is of particular importance to world politicians and business people if they are to compete effectively in the world marketplace of the next few decades. The significance of the new communication technologies in these developments, with their lasting impact on both the public and private sectors, is particularly noteworthy. This book provides such perspectives, and goes beyond the usual limited view of single authorship books in this area." — Richard J. Dieker, Western Michigan University

"I like the number of perspectives on an under-considered topic of great current importance, this is global management as distinct from multinational management. The culture insights by trained observers are both instructive and useful. They are helpful in understanding other dimensions of cross-cultural interactions, for example in political and other arenas, as well as the global management focus here. The cultural diversity represented among the authors themselves contributes greatly to the insights and the reader's comfort with their reliability." — Robert C. Morris, Executive Director, Management Training and Development Institute

"This book relates three dimensions of the current trend of globalization: integration of the world economy, management of global corporations, and processes of organizational communication. In addition to being timely and relevant, the book offers cross-cultural and cross-disciplinary perspectives." — Branislav Kovacic, University of Hartford