Using Trading Zones to Prevent Normalized Deviance in Organizations

Author(s):  
Michael E. Gorman ◽  
Patricia H. Werhane
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Ilya T. Kasavin ◽  

In the modern rankings of higher education institutions almost monopolistic American universities (Harvard, Stanford, Princeton, etc.) play the leading role promoting the idea of the “entrepreneurial university”. The classic European university fails in the competition, and the idea of the Humboldt University is losing credibility. Our assumption is that this situation is in the large part due to the historical identity of civilizational missions, elites and forms of communica­tion (“trading zones”) that initiated these types of universities. The comparative history of European and American universities demonstrates that in the first case philosophers played a leading role in achieving the goals of cultural policy, and in the second, there were managers who won in the economic competition. European and American universities were, in different proportions, culture-forming centers and factors of economic development. University reforms were usually initiated from outside: these are its competitors and sponsors, politi­cians, and entrepreneurs. Who exactly takes on the functions of the moderator in the trading zones is a key question for the university’s fate. If a business model-oriented manager builds cooperation, then the university becomes the embodiment of academic capitalism. If a cultural policy is implemented in the interdisciplinary interaction of scientists themselves, then there is a chance to measure the university's development with humanistic values and the ethos of science.


Author(s):  
David Fajardo Ortiz ◽  
◽  
Víctor M. Castaño ◽  

Una de las características de las nuevas tecnologías, como las nanotecnologías, es su carácter interdisciplinario. Químicos, físicos, ingenieros de computación, médicos, biólogos y muchos otros científicos participan conjuntamente en este tipo de investigación. Pero, ¿pueden dialogar fácilmente profesionales formados en diferentes bagajes teóricos? Uno de los resultados de este trabajo interdisciplinario es el surgimiento de lenguajes comunes, muchas veces con términos nuevos o adaptados a las circunstancias. En inglés se ha acuñado el término de trading zones para dar cuenta de ese lenguaje compartido. Este artículo ejemplifica la problemática relacionada con la investigación en nanotecnología y utiliza el caso de la nanomedicina para el tratamiento del cáncer.


2021 ◽  
pp. 495-504
Author(s):  
Tatiana Pavlova ◽  
Irina Antipova ◽  
Natalya Lomova
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 99-100
Author(s):  
Fanny Bessard

In certain respects, the development of urban retailing and crafts in the Near East from 700 to 950 was a natural response to the Muslim conquests, which joined up the late Roman and Persian trading zones. Still, it was not a self-generated process. Archaeological and textual sources reveal the prominent role that Muslim imperial authority played in the patronage of urban market and production spaces, possibly from as early as the late seventh century. While literary testimonies unanimously depict ‘Abbāsid sovereigns as more coercive in provincial life and the patronage of urban economy to support imperial propaganda, we can extrapolate from earlier accounts orally transmitted that caliphs and governors pursued an active investment policy as early as the rule of ‘Abd al-Malik in the late seventh and early eighth centuries....


Author(s):  
Zheng Liang ◽  
Raine Mäntysalo

The importance of contemporary design competitions has been increasingly recognized in fast-growing China in the course of World Trade Organization (WTO) integration and globalization. However, scientific and systematic analysis is rare on how international design competitions are introduced, and how they interact and transplant in the Chinese context. The well-known Chinese-Western culture gap and complicated social and political background make this topic more challenging. Herein, the authors focus on how the international design competitions were “translated” into both international and local perspectives with a compara­tive analysis on development of international design competitions between the Chinese and the Finnish model. To fully exemplify the design-completion procedure and the different roles of Chinese stakeholders and their perspectives on design competitions, the authors study the Baietan case, which was chosen due to its specific relationship with the city’s strategic plan, its representativeness in using international design competitions in connection to large-scale urban projects in China and its public access to the relevant documentation. The preliminary findings suggest that Chinese-style design competitions, acting as ‘designed trading zones’, with less-defined competition rules compared to the Finnish model, may foster the settings of local transformation in adopting international urban planning and design knowledge. However, an integrated approach is required to address subsequent implementation.


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