1. |
|
|
2. |
- Alvesson, Mats, et al.
(författare)
-
Does leadership create stupidity?
- 2013
-
Ingår i: Critical Perspectives on Leadership – Emotion, Toxicity and Dysfunction. - 978 0 85793 112 2
-
Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)
|
|
3. |
|
|
4. |
|
|
5. |
|
|
6. |
- Butler, Nick, et al.
(författare)
-
Professions at the Margins
- 2013
-
Ingår i: Ephemera: Theory and Politics in Organization. - 2052-1499.
-
Tidskriftsartikel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
|
|
7. |
- Egan-Wyer, Carys, et al.
(författare)
-
The ethics of the brand
- 2014
-
Ingår i: Ephemera: Theory and Politics in Organization. - 1473-2866. ; 14:1
-
Tidskriftsartikel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
|
|
8. |
|
|
9. |
-
Expatriate’s and host country National’s Professional Learning in adverse conditions : a case study of Danish Police officers stationed in Greenland
-
Proceedings (redaktörskap) (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
- Despite a context of challenging working conditions, ethnocentrism, post-colonial tensions and no valorization of local Greenlandic professional knowledge, the Danish Police Officers sent to Greenland report knowledge development. And not intercultural knowledge or interaction skills, but rather important professional learning, which leads them to become better officers once back in Denmark. This contribution, based on a qualitative case study, intends to elicit this unexpected finding and to contribute to further theory development in expatriate adjustment literature. In the present case, no cross-cultural learning (which is the most common reported learning) is reported, but rather professional expertise development. The specificity of the present case and the extraordinary conditions in which the collaboration takes place provides an opportunity to shed a new light on expatriate learning. It seems that from all previously identified variables, only self-efficacy and autonomy are potentially decisive factors for learning. In addition, when expatriates saw Greenland as a place of poor professionalism and obsolete practices, it is precisely this difference that contributed to expatriate development. This case provides an example of how an environment perceived as foreign and undesirable turns out to be beneficial for individual learning.
|
|
10. |
|
|