Browsing by Title
-
[More information][Less information]
-
En problemformuleringHøjbjerg, Erik (København, 2004)[More information][Less information]
-
Rundt om begrebets meta-teoretiske karakteristikaØrts Hansen, Carsten (København, 2007)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Det er relativt let at konstatere, at ledelsesteknologier indtager en stadig større rolle i virksomheder og organisationer. De gode historier om ledelsesteknologi kommer i en lind strøm fra forskningsinstitutioner, konsulenter samt virksomheder og organisationer, der med succes anvender en ledelsesteknologi. Balanced Scorecard, Videnregnskaber, Capability Maturity Model, Activity Based Costning, Benchmarking m. fl. er således velkendte og udbredte ledelsesteknologier i såvel offentlige som private organisationer. På trods heraf, er forståelse af hvad der er teknologi ofte en diffus størrelse, ikke mindst fordi tilgangene til, hvad der menes med teknologi, er meget forskellige. Med andre ord kræver spørgsmålet om, hvad der egentlig forstås ved en ledelsesteknologi, en nærmere analyse, og i denne artikel introduceres forskellige måder at betragte en ledelsesteknologi på, og det tydeliggøres, hvilke meta-teoretiske antagelser der kan anlægges og diskuteres ud når vi tager om ledelsesteknolgier. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/6764 Files in this item: 1
104-2007.pdf (172.6Kb) -
[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Denne artikel handler om internationalisering af ledelsesteknologier/viden gennem casestudier. Med klare budskaber og empirske beviser, udgør casestudier ofte nutidens sande og autoriserede viden om, hvordan virksomhedsledere skal opfatte verden og hvad de skal indrette deres handlinger efter. Arbejdet med at skabe casestudier kan sammenlignes med at putte skibe i flasker; vores autoriserede og sande ledelsesviden er som skibene, fordi, når først vores viden er inde i flasken som en vedtaget sandhed ser det ud som om den altid har været der og altid vil blive der. Imidlertid er arbejdet med at skabe casestudier et minutiøst og fantasifuldt arbejde, der får arbejdet med at bygge skibe i flasker til at blegne. Det skyldes ikke mindst at arbejdet ikke sker på et hyggeligt bord med lup og pincet som man måske kender det fra scenen med Poul Reichardt i ”Olsenbanden”, men derimod udfolder sig i en kompleks videnskabelig arena med forskere, tekster og praktikere. I artiklen bliver casen SoftCorp betragtet som et laboratorium, hvilket længe har været et feltråb blandt forskere, når talen falder på refleksion omkring videns skabelse (Hacking 1992, Latour 1983, Latour & Woolgar 1979). Interessen kan også siges netop at baseres på den kendsgerning, at laboratoriet i sig selv er en central notation i vores forståelse af objektiv/sand viden og af forskningen og dens udvikling. I denne artikel er argumentet således at casestudiet er center for selv samme mekanismer og processer som laboratoriet, der skaber sand og objektiv viden og det netop er dette element der gør casestudiet til en vigtig aktør i internationaliseringen af (erhvervs-)forskningens videns skabelse. På baggrund af artiklen kan læseren derfor forvente at lære to ting: forvent at lære noget af forskere og ledelsespraktikere og forvent at lære meget om forskere og ledelsespraktikere. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/6767 Files in this item: 1
105-2007.pdf (329.7Kb) -
[More information][Less information]
-
brudstykker af 27 lederes livRy Nielsen, Jens Carl; Ry, Morten (København, 2007)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Denne artikel er et uddrag af endnu ikke publiceret bog om lederes hverdagsliv. Bogen bygger i meget høj grad på interviews. Vi har således interviewet 27 ledere to gange i perioden maj 2005 oktober 2006. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/6684 Files in this item: 1
ledere i aktion og udvikling.pdf (189.6Kb) -
Lando, Henrik (København, 2006)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: How should a court set the negligence standard in a given area of activity when future (potential) injurers or victims are unlikely to know the standard set by the court? In particular, how should the standard be set in the oft-occurring case where one of the future parties is a professional actor who is likely to know the legal standard of negligence, while the other is an amateur, who is unlikely to know it? In this case, it may be optimal for the court to set the standards at the first-best level despite the amateur's ignorance of the law. The amateur may be able to infer the standards, either from the situation itself (from his knowledge of the costs and benefits of precautions), or from the act performed by the professional party. Moreover, the amateur may take due care because he realizes that the professional party will have an incentive to live up to the standard, and that the risk of a loss will therefore be on the amateur. However, when the ignorance of the amateur is "large," involving not only the legal standards but also the risks inherent in the activity, it may well be optimal for the court to depart from first best standards. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7239 Files in this item: 1
ssrn-id906084.pdf (150.8Kb) -
Møller, Michael; Rose, Caspar (København, 2001)[More information][Less information]
-
Seabrooke, Leonard (København, 2005)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Who drives domestic institutional change in the face of international economic crisis? For rationalists the answer is powerful self-interested actors who struggle for material gains during an exogenously generated crisis. For economic constructivists it is ideational entrepreneurs who use ideas as weapons to establish paths for institutional change during crisis-driven uncertainty. Both approaches are elite-centric and conceive legitimacy as established by command or proclamation. This article establishes why domestic institutional change in response to international economic constraints must be legitimated by non-elites and how their everyday actions alter policy paths established in crisis. This is illustrated by re-examining a case frequently associated with punctuated equilibrium theories of crisis and institutional change: interwar Britain. In contrast to conventional explanations, I argue that the "legitimacy gap" between elite and broader public understandings about how the economy should work informed institutional experimentation during the 1920s and 1930s and fertilized the "Keynesian Revolution" of the 1940s. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7381 Files in this item: 1
legitimacy_gaps_british_eco_no14.pdf (211.7Kb) -
når topledelsen tilskriver rationaler til strukturerZeuthen Bentsen, Eva; Borum, Finn (København, 2000)[More information][Less information]
-
Raffnsøe, Sverre (Frederiksberg, 2010)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: L’événement joue un rôle central peut-être un peu sous-estimé chez Michel Foucault. Dans cet article on essaierait de combler cette lacune, en rendant compte du rôle de l’événement dans la pensée de Foucault pour jeter un jour nouveau sur les traits de l’événement en général et le rôle de l’événement dans le livre The Music of Chance de Paul Auster en particulier. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8176 Files in this item: 1
Sverre_Raffnsoe_WP_1-2010.pdf (178.5Kb) -
Fosfuri, Andrea; Rønde, Thomas (København, 2006)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: We study a situation in which an R&D department promotes the introduction of an innovation, which results in costly re-adjustments for production workers. In response, the production department tries to resist change by improving the existing technology. We show that firms balancing the strengths of the two departments perform better. This principle is employed to derive several implications concerning the hiring of talents, monetary incentives, and technology investment policies. As a negative effect, resistance to change might distort the R&D department’s effort away from radical innovations. The firm can solve this problem by implementing the so-called ”skunk works model” of innovation where the R&D department is isolated from the rest of the organization. Resistance to change, innovation, skunk works model, contest. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7691 Files in this item: 1
artikel 02.pdf (561.0Kb) -
Davis, Lee (Frederiksberg, 2006)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This paper investigates in an exploratory manner the licensing strategies pursued by firms whose business model is based on developing and licensing out their intellectual property rights (IPRs). These are not traditional suppliers, since they do not engage in production or commercialization, but focus solely on invention. While considerable anecdotal evidence exists about these IP vendors, there has been no systematic investigation of how they use licensing to appropriate value from their investments in R&D. In this paper, we suggest that the licensing strategies they pursue can be differentiated along two main dimensions: whether the driving force behind the inventive process is “technology push” or “market pull”, and the degree to which the innovative activities carried out by the IP vendor are mutually dependent upon the innovative activities of the other relevant market players. On this basis, four main licensing strategies are identified. We investigate the relative benefits and costs of these four strategies, and the factors affecting licensing choices. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7878 Files in this item: 1
DRUID_06_12.pdf (182.4Kb) -
Davis, Lee (København, 2006)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This paper investigates in an exploratory manner the licensing strategies pursued by firms whose business model is based on developing and licensing out their intellectual property rights (IPRs). These are not traditional suppliers, since they do not engage in production or commercialization, but focus solely on invention. While considerable anecdotal evidence exists about these IP vendors, there has been no systematic investigation of how they use licensing to appropriate value from their investments in R&D. In this paper, we suggest that the licensing strategies they pursue can be differentiated along two main dimensions: whether the driving force behind the inventive process is "technology push" or "market pull", and the degree to which the innovative activities carried out by the IP vendor are mutually dependent upon the innovative activities of the other relevant market players. On this basis, four main licensing strategies are identified. We investigate the relative benefits and costs of these four strategies, and the factors affecting licensing choices. Key words: Intellectual property, licensing, strategy JEL Codes: O31, O32, O34 URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7266 Files in this item: 1
wp06-12.pdf (182.4Kb) -
unusual lessons from the past for the post-Soviet marketHolden, Nigel (København, 2001)[More information][Less information]
-
Juridisk analyse af kvinders og mænds adgang til varer og tjenesteydelserNielsen, Ruth (København, 2013)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Formålet med denne rapport er at præcisere omfanget og rækkevidden af det forbud mod kønsdiskrimination ved adgang til varer og tjenesteydelser, der i Danmark siden vedtagelsen af ligestillingsloven i 2000 gælder for alle sælgere/tjenesteydere både i den private og offentlige sektor samt af den pligt til at indarbejde kønsligestilling i al planlægning og forvaltning, der gælder i den offentlige sektor (den såkaldte mainstreamingpligt). Det vil også blive diskuteret, i hvilken udstrækning der, hvis der ønskes mere kønsligestilling, kan og bør ske skærpelse af reglerne i dansk ret inden for rammerne af de nugældende EU-regler. Kønsligestilling og forbud mod diskrimination er grundlæggende rettigheder (menneskerettigheder). I de seneste år er der i stigende grad udviklet et samspil mellem elementer i dansk ret, der stammer fra EU-niveau, og elementer, der stammer fra folkeretligt eller nationalt niveau, hvilket gør det relevant at opfatte regler af national herkomst, folkeret og regler, der er blevet til i EU-regi, som ét stort system. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8666 Files in this item: 1
Ruth_Nielsen_2013.pdf (872.3Kb) -
Authority under "Distributed Knowledge"Foss, Kirsten; Foss, Nicolai (København, 2003)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: We examine the argument, put forward by modern management writers and, in a somewhat different guise by Austrian economists, that authority is not a viable mechanism of coordination in the presence of "distributed knowledge" (which corresponds to Hayek’s treatment of the use of dispersed knowledge in society). We define authority and distributed knowledge and argue that authority is compatible with distributed knowledge. Moreover, it is not clear on theoretical grounds how distributed knowledge impacts on economic organization. An implication is that the Austrian argument that designed orders are strongly constrained by the Hayekian knowledge problem (Hayek, Kirzner, Sautet) is shaky. The positive flipside of this argument is that Austrians confront an exciting research agenda in theorizing how distributed knowledge impacts economic organization. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/7291 Files in this item: 1
the limits to designed orders.pdf (73.42Kb) -
Mahnke, Volker (København, 2000)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: Although there is reason to expect that outsourcing plays an increasingly important role in world of commerce, theories of firm boundaries poorly address associated processes of governance change. This paper seeks to address this gap in the spirit of the evolutionary theory of the firm. This approach highlights the significance of outsourcing as a "process of shifting from internal to external procurement of activities." Adopting an evolutionary process perspective suggests limits to outsourcing due to governance inseparability and partly tacit complementarity of capabilities as well as related dis-aggregation costs, including the costs of knowledge codification in the specification of interfaces in supplier/buyer relations, loss of absorptive capacity and integrating capabilities in the supplier’s system. A key departure from earlier approaches to firm boundaries is an explanation of such limits to outsourcing and their impact on two interrelated sources of efficiency: incentives and capabilities. For instance, when limits to outsourcing obtain, governance change for particular activities involves compromises of capability- and/or incentive efficiency in the experimental determination of organizational boundaries. Also discussed are environmental dynamics that variously emphasise efficiency properties of dispersed or concentrated ownership and capability development. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/6899 Files in this item: 1
wp00-13.pdf (118.7Kb) -
Exploring some benefits of constraints on creativity and aesthetic value creationFrandsen, Thomas; Friis, Ivar; Hansen, Allan (Frederiksberg, 2011)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: This paper explores the role of budgeting in the Danish film industry and seeks to illustrate the positive effects a line-budget might have on the creativity and innovativeness in film production. In our analysis we provide illustrative examples of the enabling and facilitating role of budget constraints on film production from the Danish film industry in general as well as from a case study of the process of making the Danish film “The Island of Lost Souls” in particular. We draw on Elster (2000)’s constraint theory and suggest that the constraints imposed on agents by line-item budgeting under some circumstances lead to situations where ‘less is more’ as line-item budgeting might be used to focus creative behavior as well as pre-commit the agent against passion and time inconsistency. URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/8483 Files in this item: 1
Frandsen_Friis_and_Hansen_2011.pdf (133.5Kb) -
Some Preliminary Thoughts on Entering the FieldMoeran, Brian (København, 2004)[More information][Less information]
Abstract: The theoretical discourses devoted to smell reflect a maze of fascinating taboos and mysterious attractions. In present-day Western societies, the sense of smell is undervalued. Scents are highly elusive and often cannot be directly named. Many languages have virtually no vocabulary to describe them, except in terms of the other senses of sight, sound, touch and taste. Scents are communicated primarily through metaphors. What are these linguistic and visual metaphors, and what do they tell us about the societies and cultures in which they are used? How do we know what scents ‘mean’? Is smell a universal form of semiotic communication (as global advertising campaigns suggest), or does it vary in different social and cultural contexts (as anthropological and other literature asserts)? Are there specific ‘scent cultures’? If so, in what do they consist? And how do these affect the creation, appraisal and use of fragrances in the three countries – Japan, France and the USA – in which I intend to conduct my research? URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10398/6973 Files in this item: 1
wp77.pdf (315.2Kb)