About this item
Highlights
- 'Corporate purpose' has become a battleground for stakeholders' competing desires.
- About the Author: Timothy Kuhn is Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
- 258 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Organizational Behavior
Description
Book Synopsis
'Corporate purpose' has become a battleground for stakeholders' competing desires. Some argue that corporations must simply generate profit; others suggest that we must make them create social change.
Leading organization studies scholar Timothy Kuhn argues that this 'either/or' thinking dramatically oversimplifies matters: today's corporations must be many things, all at once.
Kuhn offers a bold new Communicative Theory of the Firm to highlight the authority that creates corporations' identities and activities. The theory provides a roadmap for navigating that battleground of competing desires to produce more responsive corporations.
Drawing on communicative and new materialist theorizing, along with three insightful case studies, this book thoroughly redefines our understandings of what corporations are 'for'.
Review Quotes
"Going far beyond the organization as an entity model, Kuhn explores the complicated realities of socially mediated communication as manipulated by corporations to create a radically new understanding of what corporations want. Kuhn's book keeps readers engaged with its examples grounded in specific organizations." CHOICE
"Kuhn does not merely critique unjustified inequities created by capitalism but gives us intriguing ways to go beyond the status quo to generate productive alternatives." Organization
"This is a dazzling book! It is a provocation that forces scholars to grapple with the complexity of firms' existence and of their desires. Essential reading for rethinking the theory of the firm." Silvia Gherardi, University of Trento
About the Author
Timothy Kuhn is Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Colorado, Boulder.