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From:
Arnis Vilks <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:32:32 -0500
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Philosophy of Management

CALL FOR PAPERS (Apologies for cross-postings)

Special Issue:
PHILOSOPHICAL LESSONS FROM THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

Guest Editors: Martin Kelly, Waikato Management School, New Zealand and
Arnis Vilks, HHL Leipzig, Germany.

Rationale
The global financial crisis has created a broader 
crisis of confidence in the capitalist system 
and, in particular, in economists’ ability to 
predict, and politicians’ ability to prevent 
major economic crises.  Learning from the crisis 
in connection with a philosophical perspective is 
crucial from a philosophy on management point of 
view.  Much of the understanding of the Enron 
tragedy, and others, has come not during the 
tragedies but from retrospective, informed 
considerations of the events. In this issue we 
wish to develop an understanding of the financial 
crisis, and exploration of prevailing approaches 
to business, at the level of underlying 
philosophy in order to determine what changes 
might be apposite.  For instance, it might be 
argued that the financial crisis has taught us 
some new lessons in business ethics, but it might 
also be held that it has only highlighted what 
had been observed and argued long before the 
crisis – for example by Ghoshal[1] in 2005. It 
might also be argued that the crisis suggests the 
need to reconsider epistemological 
presuppositions of management such as 
predictability, or that the relative roles of 
transnational corporations and nation-states 
require a paradigm change in political philosophy.

Contributions are invited which may be critical 
of, or sympathetic to, those involved in the 
crisis.  Articles may address the subject from a 
holistic perspective or deal with specific areas.

Scope
Papers are called for which offer philosophical 
analyses of how the crisis evolved, how it has 
affected business practices, and how practices 
might change in response to the crisis. Areas to be addressed could include:

    * The professional responsibilities of  managers and professional advisors
    * The ethical practice of organisational 
management versus auditors, in accounting
    * Trust
    * Risk management
    * Executive compensation
    * Profit maximisation and shareholder value
    * CSR and stakeholder management
    * Banking
    * Mortgage administration
    * Hedge funds, derivatives and special purpose vehicles
    * Governmental regulation and rating agencies
    * Crisis management
    * Management educators and education

The above list is purely illustrative. Any 
submission that addresses aspects of the crisis 
from a philosophical view of business practices 
will be considered.  (By philosophical, we mean 
thoroughgoing, concentrated philosophical 
treatment of the chosen topic, beyond eg critical perspectives.)

Contributions
Contributors are asked to send paper proposals 
with abstracts to the address below. Where the 
proposal is provisionally accepted, the 
contributor will be asked to submit a full paper 
draft for peer-review.  Proposed contributions will be welcome in the form of

    * Papers
    * Short opinion pieces (500-2,000 words)
    * Case studies
    * Interviews
    * Literature reviews

Contributions - other than opinion pieces - should be 4-7,000 words in length.

Timetable
Proposals with abstracts                      Due by Friday 25 June 2010
Provisional acceptances                       Notified by Thursday 22 July
Drafts for refereeing                             Due by Friday 28 October
Referee reports                                   Friday 15 January 2011
Final drafts                                          Due by Wednesday 17 March
Publication                                          Summer 2011

Please send proposals, abstracts and any enquiries to:

Martin Kelly
Waikato Management School
Hamilton 3240
New Zealand
Email:  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>[log in to unmask]

or

Arnis Vilks
HHL – Leipzig Graduate School of Management
Jahnallee 59
04109 Leipzig
Germany

We prefer submissions by email attachment (Word or RTF format).

If submitting on paper, please send three copies, 
anonymised for double-blind reviewing, typed 
double-spaced on one side of the paper with a 
floppy disk (in Word format if possible).

Please provide a separate brief resume of the 
author(s) and full address for correspondence including phone, fax and email.

Full author guidelines for paper layout and referencing are at:

<http://www.managementphilosophers.com/Getting%20Published.htm>http://www.managementphilosophers.com/Getting%20Published.htm
Guest Editors:

Dr.  Martin Kelly is a fellow of the Association 
of Chartered Certified Accountants.   He is also 
a Chartered Accountant, New Zealand. He has 
published in excess of 100 academic works.  He 
teaches courses in ‘Organisation & Society’ at 
both the final year undergraduate level and 
postgraduate level.  These courses critically 
assess the use and abuse of Accounting in the 
contemporary business world.  Martin has taught 
on MBA courses at: Waikato University, Massey 
University, Leuven University (Belgium), 
Liverpool University (UK), Lanzhou University 
(China).  His current research interests are: 
Philosophy of Management, Sustainability, 
Stakeholder Management, CSR and Business Ethics.

Dr. Arnis Vilks is Professor of Economics at the 
Leipzig Graduate School of Management, where he 
served as Dean from 2000 to 2005.  He has done 
research mainly on philosophical and 
methodological issues in Economic Theory, such as 
aggregation theory, the notion of equilibrium, or 
logical and epistemic foundations of Game 
Theory.  His recent research addresses more 
qualitative areas in the interface between 
Management, Economics, Political Science, and 
Philosophy.  He has taught or held visiting 
positions at the Universities of Hamburg, 
Cologne, Cambridge, Riga, and Stanford, and he 
spent two recent periods of sabbatical leave at 
Waikato Management School in New Zealand.

Philosophy of Management
Founded in 2001, Philosophy of Management is the 
established forum for philosophically informed 
thinking about management in theory and practice. 
It seeks to define and develop the field of 
philosophy of management. The Journal is read by 
thinkers, scholars, teachers, consultants and 
practitioners in 20 countries. It is for 
philosophers working in all traditions, for 
management thinkers concerned with the 
philosophical foundations and validity of their 
subject and practising managers seeking to engage 
with the philosophical issues raised by what they 
believe and do. Contributors have included some 
of the world's leading philosophers, management 
scholars, consultants and managers. It is 
independent, international, refereed and appears three times each year.

Full details at 
<http://www.managementphilosophers.com/>www.managementphilosophers.com

PLEASE FORWARD THIS NOTE TO ANYONE WHO MIGHT BE INTERESTED.


Arnis Vilks






[1]  Ghoshal, S. (2005), Bad Management Practices 
Are Destroying Good Management Practices,
in: Academy of Management Learning and Education, Vol. 4, No. 1, 75-91

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