管理与组织研究论文集》:生成性文体的过去、现在和未来

IF 7 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS Journal of Management Studies Pub Date : 2024-10-02 DOI:10.1111/joms.13149
Thomas Roulet, April Wright, Stav Fainshmidt, Trish Reay
{"title":"管理与组织研究论文集》:生成性文体的过去、现在和未来","authors":"Thomas Roulet,&nbsp;April Wright,&nbsp;Stav Fainshmidt,&nbsp;Trish Reay","doi":"10.1111/joms.13149","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Essays are currently flourishing as a genre in the field of management and organization studies. Decidedly distinct from empirical, theoretical, or agenda-setting work, essays take a variety of forms throughout the field, including expository essays offering explanation, polemical essays providing critique, theoretical essays introducing new theoretical lenses, and narrative essays grounded in storytelling of personal experiences and emotions (Vince and Hibbert, <span>2018</span>). Essays are an important platform where academics can recognize that our role is not only to predict or explain (Lindebaum and Wright, <span>2021</span>) but also to motivate change through our writing. In this way, essays can be a generative genre for inviting purposeful (and sometimes radical) action towards changing our field.</p><p>The Journal of Management Studies is a strong proponent of this view of essays as a generative genre. In 2016, the journal launched its new essay section, entitled ‘<i>JMS Says</i>’. In its eight years of existence, JMS Says has matured, and the essays we edit have taken on a more defined objective and format as we lean into the possibilities of essays as a generative genre. Our focus has sharpened on narrative essays, which provide the opportunity for scholars to set out a unique and personal view on our environment (for us, as management academics) and what it could ideally become. We note that several other outlets have also created their own essay sections in accord with their views of the essay genre and particular focus. As JMS Says advances, and based on our collective years as editors at JMS Says, here we set out our views on the role, format, and potential of essays as a generative genre for management and organization scholars.</p><p>Essays matter more than ever because they can help shed light on unspoken aspects of our work as academics, from the vulnerabilities we experience (Hibbert, <span>2024</span>) to the increasing risk of research extraction in marginalized communities (Bothello and Bonfim, <span>2023</span>). They can also flip the script by challenging the assumptions at the core of our profession, such as those we have around data sharing (Schwarz and Bouckenooghe, <span>2024</span>) or the roles of the deans in business school (Cassell, <span>2024</span>). In short, essays have the power to inspire us to be better at what we do.</p><p>Yet, we can only shape essays as a generative genre with a clear definition and expectation, which we have progressively refined for the Journal of Management Studies. We see that the strength of JMS Says is its distinctiveness in coexisting with more traditional genres such as empirical or theoretical work. As a generative genre, JMS Says essays need to (1) draw from personal experiences to carry emotional weight, (2) identify an original or overlooked issue among management scholars, and (3) offer a clear ‘call to action’ for our academic community. Building on this threefold mandate, our team has edited a range of essays that we hope can make us think and act differently as management academics.</p><p>Management scholarship is often seen as aiming to ‘build theory and contribute to management practice’ (George, <span>2014</span>, p. 1). Yet, how we concretely do that is left to be imagined and the two objectives can be remote. Contributing to management practice is the paragon of impact (MacIntosh et al., <span>2021</span>), and writing novel theory is what opens the door of top journals (Cornelissen and Durand, <span>2014</span>). But there is a world out beyond scientific writing aimed at contributing to theory and practice.</p><p>Much of the debates around essays in our field have been to establish how they constitute ‘legitimate management knowledge’ and help us ‘overcome the dogma of empiricism’ (Suddaby, <span>2018</span>, pp. 441–442). The usefulness of essays is less questioned nowadays, and it has become accepted as a ‘scholarly form’ (Delbridge et al., <span>2016</span>, p. 239). Essays are an invitation for management academics to write for a different genre, with different codes and approaches, yet with a different potential for impact.</p><p>In viewing essays as a generative genre, we see essays as a form of institutional entrepreneurship for our field (Battilana et al., <span>2009</span>): Their content challenges our assumptions and values in a way that is generative for our profession and its relationship with society. Our obsession with the impact of management scholarship (Bothello and Roulet, <span>2019</span>) ignores the very mundane ways to do so: simply working on ourselves and our practices as management academics. Essays, by making us and our colleagues rethink what we take for granted as management scholars, can change the very essence of who we are, what we do, and ultimately how we impact the world of practice and more broadly society.</p><p>We tend to think of ourselves (management scholars) as an epistemic community rather than professionals trying to achieve a collective goal. We need to talk to each other, discuss our experiences, and how we work and contribute to our field and to society. This is particularly important in the fast-paced world we currently experience: Essays can help us engage in dialogue about what it means to be a management scholar. It gives us an opportunity to slow down (Marinetto, <span>2018</span>) and reconsider our practices and identity.</p><p>Since the first essays were published in the Journal of Management Studies in 2016, other outlets have started accepting and printing essays. The flourishing of essay sections across journals is a testament to the dynamism they bring to our field. Yet, their increasing numbers might have blurred the boundaries of what essays, in contrast with other types of papers in our field, can accomplish.</p><p>As JMS Says evolved, we have progressively adopted a more clearly defined view of the type of essays we publish. Some of the essays we published in the past, despite being of high quality, would not fit JMS Says today. For example, some previous essays have set up an agenda for future research, fleshed out a particular theoretical construct, or developed methodological propositions; although these are important topics, these essays were not focussed on encouraging us as management scholars to act differently. In addition, some of these older JMS Says essays were not grounded in a personal narrative, as we now require. The current editorial team believes that one of the key strengths of <i>JMS Says</i> essays is to carry personal emotions as a fuel for action, thus making <i>JMS Says</i> importantly different from the essay sections of other journals. Below, we explain the key characteristics of essays in this section of the journal. We believe that the essays we edited continue to make significant impacts on our field, which is in line with our overall objectives.</p><p>Taken together, these four core elements (Table I) underpin the <i>JMS Says</i> essay section as an outlet for personal reflection and critique of a scholar's lived experiences of the many and varied aspects of academic life that can trouble, confound, frighten, frustrate, and/or inspire us to want to do things differently. Submissions that aim to advance empirical knowledge through research, or conceptual knowledge through arguments grounded in extant literature, do not fit the <i>JMS Says</i> section and are more appropriately written up and submitted to the journal as a conventional full paper. Similarly, submissions pitching calls to action regarding the need for new research initiatives or methodologies do not fit the <i>JMS Says</i> section. Prospective authors who wish to make wider political or methodological points might consider the Point/Counterpoint section of JMS.</p><p>In this section, we focus on the key characteristics of an excellent JMS Says essay. We look for manuscripts that show how scholars have an original and critical take on their own personal experience of some particular aspect of academic life. In addition, they have married these insights with concrete calls to action about what should be done differently and by whom. In our years as editors of JMS Says, we have consistently reinforced the four core elements highlighted above as part of the journey from proposal to publication. We believe that adhering to these elements helps authors refine their call to action, make novel claims, and explain how their call was rooted in their personal experience. In terms of process, each initial 300-word proposal is considered by two JMS Says editors (who exercise this role for a given term of office) and one JMS general or associate editor. The editors collectively determine whether to offer an opportunity for the author(s) to write a revised proposal or a first version of the full essay, or decline the submission if it does not meet the criteria mentioned above. If the opportunity to develop a full essay is offered, there is still the possibility of rejection. However, the majority of invitations to submit a full essay have led to publication. As part of the process, the editors and the author(s) go back and forth through a series of revisions to sharpen the message and call to action, while highlighting the introspective and personal narrative that is critical to the essay.</p><p>The aim of the journal is ‘to publish original, innovative, and high-quality papers that advance conceptual and empirical knowledge, and address practice in the area of management and organization’. <i>JMS Says</i> plays a distinct role with regard to this aim, by helping us reflect, reconsider, and review how we publish original and innovative research.</p><p>Together these examples illustrate the vibrancy and challenges of our profession. They also point to the importance of JMS Says essays as a generative genre: This journal section encourages management scholars to reflect on who they are, and how they can improve as colleagues and as researchers.</p><p>As our academic and societal environment continues to evolve at a fast space, we predict a golden age for essays. Fully realizing the potential of essays as a generative genre requires narratives of academics who are currently missing in the pages of our journals.</p><p>The voices from the Global South, for example, remain under-represented. Yet, the experience of academia in those parts of the world is crucial to fostering relevant, inclusive, and representative theories of organizations and our scholarly community more broadly. The context of war or geopolitical uncertainty has become increasingly common, influencing both the research we produce and how we produce it. Knowing more about this context can help us as a field, with regard to understanding and unpacking the power structure within our profession and the content of such scholarship.</p><p>We also note that the voices of more established scholars, especially those from more central institutions, can tend to dominate the author list for published essays. This may be because they have the experience to understand and navigate the expectations of the publication process. However, it means the voices of early career and emerging scholars are mostly missing. Going forward, we hope JMS Says can provide opportunities for more scholars from marginalized backgrounds and at earlier stages of their career to share their unique experiences and inspire new calls for action.</p><p>Essays are increasingly important in management and organization studies, and the narrative essay form offers a unique, personal, and generative perspective that complements traditional empirical and theoretical work. The ‘JMS Says’ section in the Journal of Management Studies has been instrumental in expanding essays as a generative genre, emphasizing its distinct role in addressing visible or invisible academic challenges and inspiring social change in our field.</p><p>Essays can encourage introspection and dialogue among management scholars, prompting us to rethink our practices and identities. Thus, they provide a space to challenge assumptions and foster deeper connections within our academic community. We believe that by embracing essays as an integral component of academic work, we can continue to enhance our field by promoting a reflective and action-oriented approach to scholarship.</p><p>The authors are grateful for the all of those they have worked with on developing essays for JMSSays, and for the feedback provided by the general editors.</p>","PeriodicalId":48445,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Management Studies","volume":"62 1","pages":"518-525"},"PeriodicalIF":7.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/joms.13149","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Essays in Management and Organization Studies: Past, Present, and Future of a Generative Genre\",\"authors\":\"Thomas Roulet,&nbsp;April Wright,&nbsp;Stav Fainshmidt,&nbsp;Trish Reay\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/joms.13149\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Essays are currently flourishing as a genre in the field of management and organization studies. Decidedly distinct from empirical, theoretical, or agenda-setting work, essays take a variety of forms throughout the field, including expository essays offering explanation, polemical essays providing critique, theoretical essays introducing new theoretical lenses, and narrative essays grounded in storytelling of personal experiences and emotions (Vince and Hibbert, <span>2018</span>). Essays are an important platform where academics can recognize that our role is not only to predict or explain (Lindebaum and Wright, <span>2021</span>) but also to motivate change through our writing. In this way, essays can be a generative genre for inviting purposeful (and sometimes radical) action towards changing our field.</p><p>The Journal of Management Studies is a strong proponent of this view of essays as a generative genre. In 2016, the journal launched its new essay section, entitled ‘<i>JMS Says</i>’. In its eight years of existence, JMS Says has matured, and the essays we edit have taken on a more defined objective and format as we lean into the possibilities of essays as a generative genre. Our focus has sharpened on narrative essays, which provide the opportunity for scholars to set out a unique and personal view on our environment (for us, as management academics) and what it could ideally become. We note that several other outlets have also created their own essay sections in accord with their views of the essay genre and particular focus. As JMS Says advances, and based on our collective years as editors at JMS Says, here we set out our views on the role, format, and potential of essays as a generative genre for management and organization scholars.</p><p>Essays matter more than ever because they can help shed light on unspoken aspects of our work as academics, from the vulnerabilities we experience (Hibbert, <span>2024</span>) to the increasing risk of research extraction in marginalized communities (Bothello and Bonfim, <span>2023</span>). They can also flip the script by challenging the assumptions at the core of our profession, such as those we have around data sharing (Schwarz and Bouckenooghe, <span>2024</span>) or the roles of the deans in business school (Cassell, <span>2024</span>). In short, essays have the power to inspire us to be better at what we do.</p><p>Yet, we can only shape essays as a generative genre with a clear definition and expectation, which we have progressively refined for the Journal of Management Studies. We see that the strength of JMS Says is its distinctiveness in coexisting with more traditional genres such as empirical or theoretical work. As a generative genre, JMS Says essays need to (1) draw from personal experiences to carry emotional weight, (2) identify an original or overlooked issue among management scholars, and (3) offer a clear ‘call to action’ for our academic community. Building on this threefold mandate, our team has edited a range of essays that we hope can make us think and act differently as management academics.</p><p>Management scholarship is often seen as aiming to ‘build theory and contribute to management practice’ (George, <span>2014</span>, p. 1). Yet, how we concretely do that is left to be imagined and the two objectives can be remote. Contributing to management practice is the paragon of impact (MacIntosh et al., <span>2021</span>), and writing novel theory is what opens the door of top journals (Cornelissen and Durand, <span>2014</span>). But there is a world out beyond scientific writing aimed at contributing to theory and practice.</p><p>Much of the debates around essays in our field have been to establish how they constitute ‘legitimate management knowledge’ and help us ‘overcome the dogma of empiricism’ (Suddaby, <span>2018</span>, pp. 441–442). The usefulness of essays is less questioned nowadays, and it has become accepted as a ‘scholarly form’ (Delbridge et al., <span>2016</span>, p. 239). Essays are an invitation for management academics to write for a different genre, with different codes and approaches, yet with a different potential for impact.</p><p>In viewing essays as a generative genre, we see essays as a form of institutional entrepreneurship for our field (Battilana et al., <span>2009</span>): Their content challenges our assumptions and values in a way that is generative for our profession and its relationship with society. Our obsession with the impact of management scholarship (Bothello and Roulet, <span>2019</span>) ignores the very mundane ways to do so: simply working on ourselves and our practices as management academics. Essays, by making us and our colleagues rethink what we take for granted as management scholars, can change the very essence of who we are, what we do, and ultimately how we impact the world of practice and more broadly society.</p><p>We tend to think of ourselves (management scholars) as an epistemic community rather than professionals trying to achieve a collective goal. We need to talk to each other, discuss our experiences, and how we work and contribute to our field and to society. This is particularly important in the fast-paced world we currently experience: Essays can help us engage in dialogue about what it means to be a management scholar. It gives us an opportunity to slow down (Marinetto, <span>2018</span>) and reconsider our practices and identity.</p><p>Since the first essays were published in the Journal of Management Studies in 2016, other outlets have started accepting and printing essays. The flourishing of essay sections across journals is a testament to the dynamism they bring to our field. Yet, their increasing numbers might have blurred the boundaries of what essays, in contrast with other types of papers in our field, can accomplish.</p><p>As JMS Says evolved, we have progressively adopted a more clearly defined view of the type of essays we publish. Some of the essays we published in the past, despite being of high quality, would not fit JMS Says today. For example, some previous essays have set up an agenda for future research, fleshed out a particular theoretical construct, or developed methodological propositions; although these are important topics, these essays were not focussed on encouraging us as management scholars to act differently. In addition, some of these older JMS Says essays were not grounded in a personal narrative, as we now require. The current editorial team believes that one of the key strengths of <i>JMS Says</i> essays is to carry personal emotions as a fuel for action, thus making <i>JMS Says</i> importantly different from the essay sections of other journals. Below, we explain the key characteristics of essays in this section of the journal. We believe that the essays we edited continue to make significant impacts on our field, which is in line with our overall objectives.</p><p>Taken together, these four core elements (Table I) underpin the <i>JMS Says</i> essay section as an outlet for personal reflection and critique of a scholar's lived experiences of the many and varied aspects of academic life that can trouble, confound, frighten, frustrate, and/or inspire us to want to do things differently. Submissions that aim to advance empirical knowledge through research, or conceptual knowledge through arguments grounded in extant literature, do not fit the <i>JMS Says</i> section and are more appropriately written up and submitted to the journal as a conventional full paper. Similarly, submissions pitching calls to action regarding the need for new research initiatives or methodologies do not fit the <i>JMS Says</i> section. Prospective authors who wish to make wider political or methodological points might consider the Point/Counterpoint section of JMS.</p><p>In this section, we focus on the key characteristics of an excellent JMS Says essay. We look for manuscripts that show how scholars have an original and critical take on their own personal experience of some particular aspect of academic life. In addition, they have married these insights with concrete calls to action about what should be done differently and by whom. In our years as editors of JMS Says, we have consistently reinforced the four core elements highlighted above as part of the journey from proposal to publication. We believe that adhering to these elements helps authors refine their call to action, make novel claims, and explain how their call was rooted in their personal experience. In terms of process, each initial 300-word proposal is considered by two JMS Says editors (who exercise this role for a given term of office) and one JMS general or associate editor. The editors collectively determine whether to offer an opportunity for the author(s) to write a revised proposal or a first version of the full essay, or decline the submission if it does not meet the criteria mentioned above. If the opportunity to develop a full essay is offered, there is still the possibility of rejection. However, the majority of invitations to submit a full essay have led to publication. As part of the process, the editors and the author(s) go back and forth through a series of revisions to sharpen the message and call to action, while highlighting the introspective and personal narrative that is critical to the essay.</p><p>The aim of the journal is ‘to publish original, innovative, and high-quality papers that advance conceptual and empirical knowledge, and address practice in the area of management and organization’. <i>JMS Says</i> plays a distinct role with regard to this aim, by helping us reflect, reconsider, and review how we publish original and innovative research.</p><p>Together these examples illustrate the vibrancy and challenges of our profession. They also point to the importance of JMS Says essays as a generative genre: This journal section encourages management scholars to reflect on who they are, and how they can improve as colleagues and as researchers.</p><p>As our academic and societal environment continues to evolve at a fast space, we predict a golden age for essays. Fully realizing the potential of essays as a generative genre requires narratives of academics who are currently missing in the pages of our journals.</p><p>The voices from the Global South, for example, remain under-represented. Yet, the experience of academia in those parts of the world is crucial to fostering relevant, inclusive, and representative theories of organizations and our scholarly community more broadly. The context of war or geopolitical uncertainty has become increasingly common, influencing both the research we produce and how we produce it. Knowing more about this context can help us as a field, with regard to understanding and unpacking the power structure within our profession and the content of such scholarship.</p><p>We also note that the voices of more established scholars, especially those from more central institutions, can tend to dominate the author list for published essays. This may be because they have the experience to understand and navigate the expectations of the publication process. However, it means the voices of early career and emerging scholars are mostly missing. Going forward, we hope JMS Says can provide opportunities for more scholars from marginalized backgrounds and at earlier stages of their career to share their unique experiences and inspire new calls for action.</p><p>Essays are increasingly important in management and organization studies, and the narrative essay form offers a unique, personal, and generative perspective that complements traditional empirical and theoretical work. The ‘JMS Says’ section in the Journal of Management Studies has been instrumental in expanding essays as a generative genre, emphasizing its distinct role in addressing visible or invisible academic challenges and inspiring social change in our field.</p><p>Essays can encourage introspection and dialogue among management scholars, prompting us to rethink our practices and identities. Thus, they provide a space to challenge assumptions and foster deeper connections within our academic community. We believe that by embracing essays as an integral component of academic work, we can continue to enhance our field by promoting a reflective and action-oriented approach to scholarship.</p><p>The authors are grateful for the all of those they have worked with on developing essays for JMSSays, and for the feedback provided by the general editors.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":48445,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Management Studies\",\"volume\":\"62 1\",\"pages\":\"518-525\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":7.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-10-02\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/joms.13149\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Management Studies\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"91\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/joms.13149\",\"RegionNum\":1,\"RegionCategory\":\"管理学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"BUSINESS\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Management Studies","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/joms.13149","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BUSINESS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

论文目前在管理和组织研究领域蓬勃发展。与实证、理论或议程设置工作截然不同,论文在整个领域采取各种形式,包括提供解释的说明性论文、提供批评的辩论性论文、介绍新理论镜头的理论论文,以及以个人经历和情感故事为基础的叙事论文(Vince and Hibbert, 2018)。论文是一个重要的平台,学者可以认识到我们的角色不仅是预测或解释(Lindebaum和Wright, 2021),而且通过我们的写作来激励变革。通过这种方式,文章可以成为一种生成类型,邀请有目的的(有时是激进的)行动来改变我们的领域。《管理研究杂志》(Journal of Management Studies)强烈支持这种观点,认为论文是一种生成体裁。2016年,该杂志推出了名为“JMS说”的新文章部分。在过去的八年里,JMS说已经成熟了,我们编辑的文章也有了更明确的目标和格式,因为我们研究了散文作为一种生成体裁的可能性。我们把重点放在了叙事性论文上,这为学者们提供了一个机会,让他们对我们的环境(对我们这些管理学者来说)及其理想状态提出独特的个人观点。我们注意到,其他几个网点也创建了自己的文章部分,根据他们的观点的文章类型和特别的重点。随着JMS的发展,基于我们作为JMS编辑的共同岁月,我们在这里阐述了我们对论文作为管理和组织学者的生成体裁的角色、格式和潜力的看法。论文比以往任何时候都更重要,因为它们可以帮助我们揭示作为学者的工作中不言而喻的方面,从我们所经历的脆弱性(希伯特,2024年)到边缘化社区研究提取的风险日益增加(Bothello和bonfilm, 2023年)。它们还可以通过挑战我们专业的核心假设来扭转局面,比如我们对数据共享的假设(施瓦茨和布肯努格,2024年),或者商学院院长的角色(卡塞尔,2024年)。简而言之,文章有能力激励我们做得更好。然而,我们只能将论文塑造成一种具有明确定义和期望的生成类型,我们已经为《管理研究杂志》逐步完善了这一定义和期望。我们看到,《JMS说》的优势在于它与更传统的体裁(如经验主义或理论著作)共存的独特性。JMS表示,作为一种生成体裁,论文需要(1)从个人经历中汲取情感分量,(2)在管理学者中找出一个原始的或被忽视的问题,(3)为我们的学术界提供一个明确的“行动呼吁”。基于这一三重使命,我们的团队编辑了一系列文章,希望这些文章能让我们作为管理学学者进行不同的思考和行动。管理学术通常被视为旨在“建立理论并为管理实践做出贡献”(George, 2014,第1页)。然而,我们如何具体做到这一点还有待想象,这两个目标可能很遥远。为管理实践做出贡献是影响力的典范(MacIntosh et al., 2021),而撰写新颖的理论是打开顶级期刊大门的原因(Cornelissen and Durand, 2014)。但在旨在为理论和实践做出贡献的科学写作之外,还有一个世界。在我们的领域,围绕论文的许多争论都是为了确定它们如何构成“合法的管理知识”,并帮助我们“克服经验主义的教条”(Suddaby, 2018,第441-442页)。如今,论文的有用性受到的质疑较少,它已被接受为一种“学术形式”(Delbridge等人,2016年,第239页)。论文是对管理学者的一种邀请,让他们用不同的代码和方法为不同的流派写作,但具有不同的影响潜力。在将论文视为一种生成类型时,我们将论文视为我们领域的一种制度性创业形式(Battilana et al., 2009):它们的内容以一种对我们的职业及其与社会的关系具有生成性的方式挑战我们的假设和价值观。我们对管理学术影响的痴迷(Bothello and Roulet, 2019)忽视了实现这一目标的非常平凡的方法:简单地研究我们自己和我们作为管理学者的实践。论文通过让我们和我们的同事重新思考我们作为管理学者认为理所当然的东西,可以改变我们是谁、我们做什么,以及最终我们如何影响实践世界和更广泛的社会的本质。我们倾向于将自己(管理学者)视为一个认知共同体,而不是试图实现集体目标的专业人士。我们需要彼此交谈,讨论我们的经历,以及我们如何工作,如何为我们的领域和社会做出贡献。 在我们目前经历的快节奏世界中,这一点尤为重要:论文可以帮助我们参与对话,探讨作为一名管理学者意味着什么。它给了我们一个放慢脚步的机会(Marinetto, 2018),重新考虑我们的实践和身份。自2016年第一篇论文发表在《管理研究杂志》(Journal of Management Studies)上以来,其他媒体也开始接受和印刷论文。期刊论文部分的蓬勃发展证明了它们给我们的领域带来的活力。然而,与我们领域的其他类型的论文相比,论文数量的增加可能模糊了论文的界限。随着JMS的发展,我们逐渐对我们发表的文章类型采用了更明确的定义。我们过去发表的一些文章,尽管质量很高,但不适合今天的JMS说。例如,以前的一些论文为未来的研究设定了议程,充实了一个特定的理论结构,或者发展了方法论命题;尽管这些都是重要的话题,但这些文章的重点并不是鼓励我们作为管理学者采取不同的行动。此外,一些旧的JMS文章并没有像我们现在所要求的那样,以个人叙述为基础。目前的编辑团队认为,JMS Says文章的一个关键优势是将个人情感作为行动的燃料,因此使JMS Says与其他期刊的文章部分有重要的不同。下面,我们将解释该期刊这部分文章的主要特征。我们相信,我们编辑的论文将继续对我们的领域产生重大影响,这符合我们的总体目标。综上所述,这四个核心要素(表1)支撑着JMS说的论文部分,作为一个个人反思和批评学者的生活经历的出口,学术生活的许多不同方面可能会给我们带来麻烦、困惑、恐惧、沮丧和/或激励我们想要做不同的事情。旨在通过研究推进经验知识,或通过基于现有文献的论点来推进概念知识的投稿,不适合JMS Says部分,更适合作为传统的完整论文撰写并提交给该期刊。类似地,关于需要新的研究计划或方法的呼吁行动的提交也不适合JMS所说的部分。希望提出更广泛的政治或方法论观点的潜在作者可以考虑JMS的观点/对位部分。在本节中,我们将重点关注一篇优秀的JMS论文的关键特征。我们寻找的手稿表明,学者如何有一个原创的和批判性的采取自己的个人经验,学术生活的某些特定方面。此外,他们还将这些见解与具体的行动呼吁结合起来,要求采取不同的行动,以及由谁采取不同的行动。在我们担任《JMS说》编辑的这些年里,我们一直在强化上面强调的四个核心要素,作为从提案到出版的旅程的一部分。我们相信,坚持这些元素有助于作者完善他们的行动呼吁,提出新颖的主张,并解释他们的呼吁是如何根植于他们的个人经历的。就流程而言,每个初始的300字提案由两名JMS said编辑(在给定的任期内执行此角色)和一名JMS总编辑或副编辑考虑。编辑们共同决定是否为作者提供一个机会来写一个修改后的建议或完整文章的第一版,或者如果它不符合上述标准,则拒绝提交。如果有机会发展一篇完整的文章,仍然有可能被拒绝。然而,大多数邀请提交一篇完整的文章都导致了发表。作为这个过程的一部分,编辑和作者会反复进行一系列的修改,以强化信息和号召行动,同时强调对文章至关重要的内省和个人叙述。该杂志的目标是“发表原创、创新和高质量的论文,促进概念和经验知识的发展,并解决管理和组织领域的实践问题”。JMS说,通过帮助我们反思,重新考虑和审查我们如何发表原创和创新研究,在这一目标方面发挥了独特的作用。这些例子共同说明了我们这个行业的活力和挑战。他们还指出,文章作为一种生成体裁的重要性:该期刊的这一部分鼓励管理学者反思自己是谁,以及作为同事和研究人员,他们该如何改进。随着我们的学术和社会环境继续快速发展,我们预测论文的黄金时代将到来。 要充分认识论文作为一种生成体裁的潜力,就需要我们期刊中目前缺失的学者的叙述。例如,来自全球南方的声音仍然没有得到充分代表。然而,这些地区学术界的经验对于更广泛地培养相关的、包容的、有代表性的组织理论和我们的学术社区至关重要。战争或地缘政治不确定性的背景已经变得越来越普遍,这既影响了我们的研究成果,也影响了我们的研究方式。更多地了解这一背景可以帮助我们作为一个领域,理解和揭示我们专业内部的权力结构以及这种学术研究的内容。我们还注意到,更知名的学者,尤其是来自更核心机构的学者,往往会在已发表论文的作者名单上占据主导地位。这可能是因为他们有经验来理解和驾驭出版过程的期望。然而,这意味着早期职业和新兴学者的声音大多消失了。展望未来,我们希望JMS Says能够为更多来自边缘背景和职业生涯早期阶段的学者提供机会,分享他们独特的经验,并激发新的行动呼吁。论文在管理和组织研究中越来越重要,叙事论文形式提供了一个独特的、个人的和生成的视角,补充了传统的经验和理论工作。《管理研究杂志》(Journal of Management Studies)的“JMS说”(JMS Says)部分在将论文作为一种生成体裁进行扩展方面发挥了重要作用,强调了其在解决可见或不可见的学术挑战和激发我们领域的社会变革方面的独特作用。论文可以鼓励管理学者之间的内省和对话,促使我们重新思考我们的实践和身份。因此,它们提供了一个挑战假设的空间,并在我们的学术社区内培养更深层次的联系。我们相信,通过将论文作为学术工作的一个组成部分,我们可以通过促进反思和以行动为导向的学术方法,继续加强我们的领域。作者感谢所有与他们一起为jmssay编写论文的人,感谢总编辑提供的反馈。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
Essays in Management and Organization Studies: Past, Present, and Future of a Generative Genre

Essays are currently flourishing as a genre in the field of management and organization studies. Decidedly distinct from empirical, theoretical, or agenda-setting work, essays take a variety of forms throughout the field, including expository essays offering explanation, polemical essays providing critique, theoretical essays introducing new theoretical lenses, and narrative essays grounded in storytelling of personal experiences and emotions (Vince and Hibbert, 2018). Essays are an important platform where academics can recognize that our role is not only to predict or explain (Lindebaum and Wright, 2021) but also to motivate change through our writing. In this way, essays can be a generative genre for inviting purposeful (and sometimes radical) action towards changing our field.

The Journal of Management Studies is a strong proponent of this view of essays as a generative genre. In 2016, the journal launched its new essay section, entitled ‘JMS Says’. In its eight years of existence, JMS Says has matured, and the essays we edit have taken on a more defined objective and format as we lean into the possibilities of essays as a generative genre. Our focus has sharpened on narrative essays, which provide the opportunity for scholars to set out a unique and personal view on our environment (for us, as management academics) and what it could ideally become. We note that several other outlets have also created their own essay sections in accord with their views of the essay genre and particular focus. As JMS Says advances, and based on our collective years as editors at JMS Says, here we set out our views on the role, format, and potential of essays as a generative genre for management and organization scholars.

Essays matter more than ever because they can help shed light on unspoken aspects of our work as academics, from the vulnerabilities we experience (Hibbert, 2024) to the increasing risk of research extraction in marginalized communities (Bothello and Bonfim, 2023). They can also flip the script by challenging the assumptions at the core of our profession, such as those we have around data sharing (Schwarz and Bouckenooghe, 2024) or the roles of the deans in business school (Cassell, 2024). In short, essays have the power to inspire us to be better at what we do.

Yet, we can only shape essays as a generative genre with a clear definition and expectation, which we have progressively refined for the Journal of Management Studies. We see that the strength of JMS Says is its distinctiveness in coexisting with more traditional genres such as empirical or theoretical work. As a generative genre, JMS Says essays need to (1) draw from personal experiences to carry emotional weight, (2) identify an original or overlooked issue among management scholars, and (3) offer a clear ‘call to action’ for our academic community. Building on this threefold mandate, our team has edited a range of essays that we hope can make us think and act differently as management academics.

Management scholarship is often seen as aiming to ‘build theory and contribute to management practice’ (George, 2014, p. 1). Yet, how we concretely do that is left to be imagined and the two objectives can be remote. Contributing to management practice is the paragon of impact (MacIntosh et al., 2021), and writing novel theory is what opens the door of top journals (Cornelissen and Durand, 2014). But there is a world out beyond scientific writing aimed at contributing to theory and practice.

Much of the debates around essays in our field have been to establish how they constitute ‘legitimate management knowledge’ and help us ‘overcome the dogma of empiricism’ (Suddaby, 2018, pp. 441–442). The usefulness of essays is less questioned nowadays, and it has become accepted as a ‘scholarly form’ (Delbridge et al., 2016, p. 239). Essays are an invitation for management academics to write for a different genre, with different codes and approaches, yet with a different potential for impact.

In viewing essays as a generative genre, we see essays as a form of institutional entrepreneurship for our field (Battilana et al., 2009): Their content challenges our assumptions and values in a way that is generative for our profession and its relationship with society. Our obsession with the impact of management scholarship (Bothello and Roulet, 2019) ignores the very mundane ways to do so: simply working on ourselves and our practices as management academics. Essays, by making us and our colleagues rethink what we take for granted as management scholars, can change the very essence of who we are, what we do, and ultimately how we impact the world of practice and more broadly society.

We tend to think of ourselves (management scholars) as an epistemic community rather than professionals trying to achieve a collective goal. We need to talk to each other, discuss our experiences, and how we work and contribute to our field and to society. This is particularly important in the fast-paced world we currently experience: Essays can help us engage in dialogue about what it means to be a management scholar. It gives us an opportunity to slow down (Marinetto, 2018) and reconsider our practices and identity.

Since the first essays were published in the Journal of Management Studies in 2016, other outlets have started accepting and printing essays. The flourishing of essay sections across journals is a testament to the dynamism they bring to our field. Yet, their increasing numbers might have blurred the boundaries of what essays, in contrast with other types of papers in our field, can accomplish.

As JMS Says evolved, we have progressively adopted a more clearly defined view of the type of essays we publish. Some of the essays we published in the past, despite being of high quality, would not fit JMS Says today. For example, some previous essays have set up an agenda for future research, fleshed out a particular theoretical construct, or developed methodological propositions; although these are important topics, these essays were not focussed on encouraging us as management scholars to act differently. In addition, some of these older JMS Says essays were not grounded in a personal narrative, as we now require. The current editorial team believes that one of the key strengths of JMS Says essays is to carry personal emotions as a fuel for action, thus making JMS Says importantly different from the essay sections of other journals. Below, we explain the key characteristics of essays in this section of the journal. We believe that the essays we edited continue to make significant impacts on our field, which is in line with our overall objectives.

Taken together, these four core elements (Table I) underpin the JMS Says essay section as an outlet for personal reflection and critique of a scholar's lived experiences of the many and varied aspects of academic life that can trouble, confound, frighten, frustrate, and/or inspire us to want to do things differently. Submissions that aim to advance empirical knowledge through research, or conceptual knowledge through arguments grounded in extant literature, do not fit the JMS Says section and are more appropriately written up and submitted to the journal as a conventional full paper. Similarly, submissions pitching calls to action regarding the need for new research initiatives or methodologies do not fit the JMS Says section. Prospective authors who wish to make wider political or methodological points might consider the Point/Counterpoint section of JMS.

In this section, we focus on the key characteristics of an excellent JMS Says essay. We look for manuscripts that show how scholars have an original and critical take on their own personal experience of some particular aspect of academic life. In addition, they have married these insights with concrete calls to action about what should be done differently and by whom. In our years as editors of JMS Says, we have consistently reinforced the four core elements highlighted above as part of the journey from proposal to publication. We believe that adhering to these elements helps authors refine their call to action, make novel claims, and explain how their call was rooted in their personal experience. In terms of process, each initial 300-word proposal is considered by two JMS Says editors (who exercise this role for a given term of office) and one JMS general or associate editor. The editors collectively determine whether to offer an opportunity for the author(s) to write a revised proposal or a first version of the full essay, or decline the submission if it does not meet the criteria mentioned above. If the opportunity to develop a full essay is offered, there is still the possibility of rejection. However, the majority of invitations to submit a full essay have led to publication. As part of the process, the editors and the author(s) go back and forth through a series of revisions to sharpen the message and call to action, while highlighting the introspective and personal narrative that is critical to the essay.

The aim of the journal is ‘to publish original, innovative, and high-quality papers that advance conceptual and empirical knowledge, and address practice in the area of management and organization’. JMS Says plays a distinct role with regard to this aim, by helping us reflect, reconsider, and review how we publish original and innovative research.

Together these examples illustrate the vibrancy and challenges of our profession. They also point to the importance of JMS Says essays as a generative genre: This journal section encourages management scholars to reflect on who they are, and how they can improve as colleagues and as researchers.

As our academic and societal environment continues to evolve at a fast space, we predict a golden age for essays. Fully realizing the potential of essays as a generative genre requires narratives of academics who are currently missing in the pages of our journals.

The voices from the Global South, for example, remain under-represented. Yet, the experience of academia in those parts of the world is crucial to fostering relevant, inclusive, and representative theories of organizations and our scholarly community more broadly. The context of war or geopolitical uncertainty has become increasingly common, influencing both the research we produce and how we produce it. Knowing more about this context can help us as a field, with regard to understanding and unpacking the power structure within our profession and the content of such scholarship.

We also note that the voices of more established scholars, especially those from more central institutions, can tend to dominate the author list for published essays. This may be because they have the experience to understand and navigate the expectations of the publication process. However, it means the voices of early career and emerging scholars are mostly missing. Going forward, we hope JMS Says can provide opportunities for more scholars from marginalized backgrounds and at earlier stages of their career to share their unique experiences and inspire new calls for action.

Essays are increasingly important in management and organization studies, and the narrative essay form offers a unique, personal, and generative perspective that complements traditional empirical and theoretical work. The ‘JMS Says’ section in the Journal of Management Studies has been instrumental in expanding essays as a generative genre, emphasizing its distinct role in addressing visible or invisible academic challenges and inspiring social change in our field.

Essays can encourage introspection and dialogue among management scholars, prompting us to rethink our practices and identities. Thus, they provide a space to challenge assumptions and foster deeper connections within our academic community. We believe that by embracing essays as an integral component of academic work, we can continue to enhance our field by promoting a reflective and action-oriented approach to scholarship.

The authors are grateful for the all of those they have worked with on developing essays for JMSSays, and for the feedback provided by the general editors.

求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
CiteScore
16.40
自引率
5.70%
发文量
99
期刊介绍: The Journal of Management Studies is a prestigious publication that specializes in multidisciplinary research in the field of business and management. With a rich history of excellence, we are dedicated to publishing innovative articles that contribute to the advancement of management and organization studies. Our journal welcomes empirical and conceptual contributions that are relevant to various areas including organization theory, organizational behavior, human resource management, strategy, international business, entrepreneurship, innovation, and critical management studies. We embrace diversity and are open to a wide range of methodological approaches and philosophical perspectives.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Issue Information Issue Information Issue Information - Notes for Contributors Issue Information
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1