Site MapHelpFeedbackTable of Contents
Table of Contents
(See related pages)

<a onClick="window.open('/olcweb/cgi/pluginpop.cgi?it=jpg::::/sites/dl/free/0008889992/656475/0072507942_org_behavior_3e_cover.jpg','popWin', 'width=NaN,height=NaN,resizable,scrollbars');" href="#"><img valign="absmiddle" height="16" width="16" border="0" src="/olcweb/styles/shared/linkicons/image.gif"> (27.0K)</a>

Table of Contents

ANNUAL EDITIONS: Organizational Behavior 02/03, Third Edition

UNIT 1. Introduction to Organizational Behavior

Part A. Organizational Behavior in Context

1. Getting a Grip on Group Behavior, Gary J. Salton, Industrial Management, November 2000

Organizational engineering allows managers to predict the behavior of groups without the use of psychology. It does this by using sociological tools that focus on relationships, not people.

2. Shifting Paradigms: From Newton to Chaos, Toby J. Tetenbaum, Organizational Dynamics, Spring 1998

The old paradigm for industry and most organizations was linear. Today, the old idea of “if X, then Y” does not necessarily apply. In fact, the paradigm now is “if X, then?”

3. The New Frontier: Transformation of Management for the New Millennium, Michael A. Hitt, Organizational Dynamics, Winter 2000

Management will be different in the new century. Stability is a thing of the past and managers are going to have to learn to deal with very rapid change.

Part B. Employer-Employee Relations

4. Employer Sanctions Against Immigrant Workers, Muzaffar Chishti, Working USA, March/April 2000

The immigration reform laws were enacted to protect American workers. But perhaps they are not working in quite the manner for which they were intended.

5. Straight Down the Line, Neil Merrick, Employee Benefits News, September 2000

If the people in your organization are going to be successful in communicating their problems and ideas, then you must train them to communicate effectively. This will improve employer-employee relations.

UNIT 2. Individual Behavior

Part A. Diversity and Individual Difference

6. Cultural Diversity and the Dynamism of History, Sasaki Takeshi, Journal of Japanese Trade & Industry, January/February 2000

Cultures are diverse, and blending them together into a workable, global society will be one of the major tasks of the twenty-first century.

7. Individual and Organizational Accountabilities: Reducing Stereotypes and Prejudice Within the Workplace, Bryan Gingrich, The Diversity Factor, Winter 2000

It is natural for people to categorize individuals. Unfortunately, the categorization can often lead to stereotyping and then to prejudice in the workplace. This article deals with strategies to combat this phenomenon.

Part B. Values and Ethics

8. Ethics of Tomorrow's Business Managers: The Influence of Personal Beliefs and Values, Individual Characteristics, and Situational Factors, Mohammed Y. A. Rawwas and Hans R. Isakson, Journal of Education for Business, July 2000

Tomorrow's business leaders are in today's business classrooms. Their attitudes and actions concerning ethics and ethical behavior will say a lot about how business will be conducted in the future.

Part C. Motivation

9. The Beauty of the Organizational Beast, Geoffrey M. Bellman, Training & Development, May 2000

Getting people in an organization to change is difficult work. This article offers some reasons why it is important.

10. Peer Responses to Low Performers: An Attributional Model of Helping in the Context of Groups, Jeffrey A. Lepine and Linn Van Dyne, Academy of Management Review, January 2001

How members of groups view low performers and the help they are likely and willing to give them, given a particular set of circumstances, is the subject of this article.

Part D. Learning and Self-Management

11. The New (Beep, Beep) Rules of HRD, Chip R. Bell and Oren Harari, Training & Development, August 2000

For organizations that want to grow and prosper in the future, the rules are now different. The old rules meant looking back; the new rules mean looking forward. The authors write, “Be a Road Runner, not a Wile E. Coyote.”

12. Are We Writing the Obituary for the Learning Organization?, Edward E. Gordon, Employee Benefit News, April 1, 2001

The people who succeed are people who commit to lifelong learning. Today, many organizations are leaving the job of learning up to the individual employee. That could be a mistake.

UNIT 3. Social and Group Process

Part A. Group Dynamics

13. Flying Off Over Office Politics, Libby Mulitz, InfoWorld, November 6, 2000

Some organizations are growing so fast that it is almost impossible for them to create teams and develop productive relationships. Office politics often gets in the way. Here are some things that can be done to build trust, create productive relationships, and integrate departments.

14. Identifying Who Matters: Mapping Key Players in Multiple Environments, Jeffrey L. Cummings and Jonathan P. Doh, California Management Review, Winter 2000

For large organizations to be successful, they must pursue strategies that take in not only economic considerations, but social, political, and governmental strategies as well.

Part B. Communication

15. Passing the Word: Toward a Model of Gossip and Power in the Workplace, Nancy B. Kurland and Lisa Hope Pelled, Academy of Management Review, April 2000

Every organization has networks of informal communication. This article provides a model for informal communication as well as an analysis of the consequences of it.

Part C. Leadership

16. Leadership A to Z, Haidee Allerton, Training & Development, March 2000

Leadership is a topic of constant interest that has many and changing ideas. A few of them are discussed in this question-and-answer session with James O'Toole, whose new book is titled “A Guide for the Appropriately Ambitious.”

17. The Manager as Political Leader: A Challenge to Professionalism?, John Nalbandian, Public Management, March 2000

Mixing politics and leadership can be difficult for managers in the public sector. This is a success story.

Part D. Power and Politics

18. Political Skill: An Antidote for Workplace Stressors, Pamela L. Perrewe, Gerald R. Ferris, Dwight D. Frink, and William P. Anthony, Academy of Management Review, August 2000

Every organization has a culture of politics. Some managers thrive on it and some do not. This article discusses how the ability to deal effectively with the political aspects of an organization can help reduce workplace stressors.

Part E. Teams

19. Team Structure and Performance: Assessing the Mediating Role of Intrateam Process and the Moderating Role of Task Type, Greg L. Stewart and Murray R. Barrick, Academy of Management Journal, April 2000

Teams are the way many organizations get things done. How they are structured and the type of task they are designed to perform will have an impact on their effectiveness and success.

UNIT 4. Organizational Systems

Part A. Emerging Organizational Design

20. The Strands That Connect: An Empirical Assessment of How Organizational Design Links Employees to the Organization, Miles H. Overholt, Gerald E. Connally, Thomas C. Harrington, and David Lopez, Human Resource Planning Journal, June 2000

This article examines the various ways that organizations attempt to link employees to their organizational culture so that they will be more productive.

21. A Closer Look: Re-Viewing the Organization, Henry Mintzberg and Ludo Van der Heyden, Ivey Business Journal, September 2000

According to the authors, organizations do four things—they find, they keep, they transform, and they distribute. How they do it and the degree to which they accomplish these tasks is what makes them different and unique.

22. The Future That Has Already Happened, Peter Drucker, The Futurist, November 1998

The foreseeable future, or at least that part of the future that can be anticipated, has already happened and it means many changes. Two converging trends that managers must face, according to Peter Drucker, are the declining workforce and the importance of knowledge as a resource.

23. Creating a Hybrid Organizational Form From Parental Blueprints: The Emergence and Evolution of Knowledge Firms, Amalya L. Oliver and Kathleen Montgomery, Human Relations, Volume 53, Number 1, 2000

As the economy evolves, new forms of organizational structure are also evolving to meet the demands of the marketplace. This article looks at the evolution of new biotechnology firms (NBFs).

Part B. Work Design

24. What Might Work Look Like?, Robin Hahnel and Cynthia Peters, Dollars and Sense, November/December 2000

Work is likely to change in the twenty-first century. Here are some fairly radical ideas describing what work may look like in the future.

Part C. Performance Appraisal, Feedback, and Rewards

25. Knowledge Transfer: A Basis for Competitive Advantage in Firms, Linda Argote and Paul Ingram, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, May 2000

A key to future success in a competitive environment will be how organizations are able to develop and transfer knowledge. Here are some ways that it can be done.

Part D. Human Resources Policies and Practices

26. Strategizing for HR, Kathryn Tyler, HR Magazine, February 2001

Human resource departments are going to have to develop their own plans that fit into their organization's corporate strategy. They can no longer muddle through; rather, human resources departments must serve and meet the objectives of their organization.

Part E. Organizational Culture

27. Managing Social Capital, Lovemore Mbigi, Training & Development, January 2000

The African Spirit Hierarchy has lessons that can be applied to managing an organizational culture.

28. The Six Levers for Managing Organizational Culture, David W. Young, Business Horizons, September/October 2000

Managers have six tools that they can use to modify an organization's culture: strategy formulation process, authority and influence, conflict management, motivation, management control, and customer/client management.

UNIT 5. Organizational Change and Development

Part A. International Organizations

29. Who Gets to Run the World?, Devesh Kapur, Foreign Policy, November/December 2000

Where is the talent going to come from to operate the global agencies that are important to maintaining world peace and global trade and development? Are the best people being trained and selected for these positions? Perhaps not!

Part B. Stress Management

30. Mind Your Own Business: How to Handle Pressure, Ted Pollock, Supervision, October 2000

Stress is a part of every manager's job. It is important to remember that nobody wins all of the time, and coming to that realization often requires a great deal of self-knowledge and patience.

Part C. Managing Change

31. Rethinking Resistance and Recognizing Ambivalence: A Multidimensional View of Attitudes Toward an Organizational Change, Sandy Kristin Piderit, Academy of Management Review, October 2000

People frequently resist change in any organization. However, that resistance is often based on ambivalence and the effects of ambivalence to change. Developing strategies to deal with the ambivalence and not turning that ambivalence into resistance is the subject of this article.








Contemporary Learning SeriesOnline Learning Center

Home > Organizational Behavior > 02/03 3e > Table of Contents