Afterword: DESCRIPTION, PREDICTION, POLICY—DOES HISTORY MATTER?

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2009 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 816-830 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Tiffany

In 2008 Professor Eric Godelier published a provocative essay in which he concluded that a positive dialogue between business historians and both management scientists and business management practitioners was possible. While the divide between these camps was not trivial, he nevertheless wrote that current events and scholarship was bringing them together, at least as he could observe these trends in the context of emerging French scholarship. In this current review, my own conclusion is the opposite. Management scholarship, in fact, continues to move away from the “soft” approach of the historian and more towards the “rigorous” and quantitatively biased methodology of the management sciences. My essay reviews the background of this development in terms of American business practice and scholarship, as it seeks to demonstrate how the evolution of management training in the United States brought us to the current state of affairs where “hard” drives out soft in almost every encounter. However, while I conclude that this is indeed the current reality, I do not imply any endorsement of this outcome. Rather, I end with a hope that some forms of rapprochement might be possible-yet with an acknowledgement that we will have no definitive answers to this question anytime soon.


2018 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 138
Author(s):  
Nava Michael-Tsabari ◽  
Stephen Mihm ◽  
John Seaman ◽  
Emmanuel Viellard ◽  
Rania Labaki

Author(s):  
Jennifer Johns ◽  
Peter Buckley ◽  
Liam Campling ◽  
Gary Cook ◽  
Martin Hess ◽  
...  
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2011 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Woolcock ◽  
Simon Szreter ◽  
Vijayendra Rao

2011 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 383-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maksymilian Del Mar

Abstract This paper argues that not only does history matter to legal epistemology, but also that understanding legal epistemology can yield a certain understanding of the past. The paper focuses on the common law practice of precedent and argues that there is no set of rules, principles, reasons or material facts that constitute the fixed or foundational content of past decisions (a ‘timeless what’ that determines its own relevance), but rather that what is taken by a judge resolving a particular dispute to be the content of past decisions depends on the active and creative construal of relevance engaged in by that judge. Precedents are better thought of as ‘thick resources with dynamic content’. Such content is constrained by a variety of stabilising practices, but never so constrained as to determine how it can be construed to be relevant. This image of law’s past may offer a general view of the past as something with which we can actively and creatively relate in the course of coping with the present.


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