Discussion: View Thread

Redemption cfp CMS Conference (deadline extended)

  • 1.  Redemption cfp CMS Conference (deadline extended)

    Posted 01-20-2010 17:27
    Apologies for cross postings. Note the deadline has been extended to January
    31st!

    Critical Management Studies Research Workshop
    Montreal, Aug 4-5, 2010
    Meets Prior to Academy of Management)

    Stream Title:
    Redemption: Possibilities for Salvation and Liberation in Organizations

    Conveners: Angela Hope (angela.hope@hotmail.com)
    Peter Case (peter.case@uwe.ac.uk)
    Matthew Eriksen (mattheweriksen@hotmail.com)
    Scott Taylor (scott.taylor@exeter.ac.uk)
    Heather Hopfl (hopfl@essex.ac.uk)

    The CMS Division of the AOM will conduct a research workshop immediately
    prior to the 2010 Academy of Management meetings in Montreal in August 2010.
    The workshop will begin mid-morning of Wednesday Aug 4 and run till the
    evening of Thursday Aug 5. We are coordinating a stream called “Redemption”
    in this workshop, and seek submissions from interested researchers.
    What does or might redemption mean in a workplace context? Can individual
    employees be redeemed? Or from a macro-perspective, can an organization
    itself be redeemed? This stream explores the interface between critical
    management studies and religious studies, theology, and/or spirituality.
    The discourse on soteriology deals with the study of salvation/redemption
    theory which is a universal theme within world religions and spiritual
    practices. Max Weber (1922) contends the need for salvation is universal and
    integral to human experience. How the notion of redemption manifests in
    organizations is the focus of this stream. In other words what does the
    workplace contribute to the redemptive experience? How does the
    organizational member attain or experience redemption? Does a person
    experience redemption through work relationships? Is it the toiling and
    laboring of work itself that is salvific or something else?
    Redemption, in the Judeo-Christian tradition, is typically understood to
    signify a process of being expiated from something ‘lesser’ in order to
    achieve a salvific status. Usually, the ‘lesser’ connotes something internal
    to the self—a sinful state (Powell, 2008). However, this is only one
    understanding of redemption. Other understandings denote redemption to
    symbolize an experience of liberation from suffering or something external
    to the self where the individual is not culpable necessarily. Yet other
    meanings of redemption are synonymous with terms like ‘human flourishing’
    and ‘transformation.’ How do these different meanings relate to work or any
    other type of organization?

    There are two ways to approach these general questions—one is from a
    micro-level focusing on the individual and the second is from a macro-level
    focusing on a collective group or the organization itself as the unit of
    analysis. The notion that an organization itself can be redeemed is a topic
    deserving further exploration. Many scandals have erupted in organizations
    (e.g. Enron, Catholic Church) in which the organizational image and
    reputation has been tarnished. Can these organizations be redeemed in the
    aftermath of a scandal? And further what about those organizations who have
    not necessarily committed ‘sins’?

    In terms of the micro-approach, there are many possible pathways to
    conceptualize how redemption and the organization intersect. In Christian
    soteriology or salvation theory, Augustine writes extensively on how it is
    the will of the individual that is the site of redemption. In order for one
    to achieve salvation, the will must be oriented to the Good (Augustine &
    Wand, 1963). Others like Thomas Aquinas contend the seat of redemption to
    be situated in the intellect or through knowledge (Davies, 2006). Both
    regard the body as that which can ‘get in the way’ of redemption; it must be
    tempered in order for the will or intellect to orient itself towards what is
    salvific, godly, divine. Further it is described as a static event rather
    than a process, a point that process thinkers have noted. In work, home, or
    volunteer organizations, the site from which redemptive experiences occur
    may differ on the type of organization, labor, and cultural factors. Does
    the body play a role in the redemptive experience or were Augustine and
    Aquinas correct in their assumptions?
    In light of the above, this stream attempts explore the following:
    1. Change management, organizational change, and soteriological pursuits in
    the organization.
    2. How the insights of postmodern theologies and liberation theologies –
    process theology, black liberation, feminist/womanist, mujerista, and queer
    theology - can inform and influence management and organizing focusing on
    the theme of redemption
    3. Storytelling and salvation, organizational narratives, histories, as
    redemptive narratives.
    4. The organization itself as redeemed in the aftermath of trauma or
    corruption. Can an organization influence turnover, absenteeism, and burnout
    and how do these mundane positivist constructs relate to the theme of redemption
    5. Evil, theodicy, and the quest for liberation from suffering—e.g sexism,
    racism, heterosexism, and other forms of discrimination at work. Where is
    redemption rooted from in this context? Is the mind, body, or the will the
    seat of redemption in the organizational context?
    The motivation for the workshop is simple: neither the PDW nor the main
    program events at the AOM give us enough opportunity to engage in in-depth
    discussion of papers in critical management studies. Therefore this workshop
    will be organized as a series of parallel streams (working groups), with
    each stream comprising of people who have contributed papers on a
    well-defined topic (perhaps with some invited discussants), working together
    over the course of the day-and-a-half, discussing the papers in depth. In
    order to maximize discussion, authors will not present their own papers, but
    rather participants will be asked to present and discuss each others'
    papers. We will also arrange a couple of plenary sessions and some social
    time where all the participants come together.
    We are yet to finalize the cost of the workshop, but we hope to be able to
    offer low-cost accommodation during the event, and dovetail it with the AOM
    meetings, especially those events involving the CMS Division. We will
    finalize the details quickly on the expenses of the workshop.
    If you wish to be part of this stream, please submit a 250 word abstract to
    angela.hope@hotmail.com and angela.hope@smu.ca by January 15th, 2010.
    Please note that submissions can be concurrently on review at the regular
    AOM 2010 conference as well. The submission of an abstract constitutes a
    good-faith agreement to submit a full paper for the stream by June 1, 2010
    if the paper is accepted. The final paper should be less than 8000 words in
    length.
    References:
    (Augustine & Wand, 1963; Case, 2008; Weber, 1993)
    Augustine, & Wand, J. (1963). City of God. London,: Oxford University Press.
    Davies, B. (2006). Aquinas's Summa theologiae : critical essays. Lanham,
    Md.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Powell, S. M. (2008). Discovering our Christian faith : an introduction to
    theology. Kansas City, Mo.: Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City.
    Weber, M. (1993). The sociology of religion. Boston: Beacon Press.

    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the MSR Listserv, please send your email to: MSR@AOMLISTS.pace.edu

    To visit the Academy's MSR Web site, please visit: http://group.aomonline.org/msr/

    To manage you MSR Listserv subscription, please visit: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=MSR&A=1