Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay |
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第 49 頁
Discussion In our first example, a fairly routine change was made in procedure,
and hierarchy and task specialization merged easily; they were coterminous. The
organization was set up to handle just such events. In the second example, the ...
Discussion In our first example, a fairly routine change was made in procedure,
and hierarchy and task specialization merged easily; they were coterminous. The
organization was set up to handle just such events. In the second example, the ...
第 59 頁
tive time on established routine functions and instead to deal with the exceptional
cases that come up, served management very well. As obvious as "plan ahead"
sounds, it took a lot of saying back in the 1920s, for business rarely did any ...
tive time on established routine functions and instead to deal with the exceptional
cases that come up, served management very well. As obvious as "plan ahead"
sounds, it took a lot of saying back in the 1920s, for business rarely did any ...
第 171 頁
A few engineers and scientists or computer experts may, in fact, be floating pools
of expertise responsible for setting up new routines, but that is just what they do
— set up new routines for the mass of employees to follow. I think that it is the ...
A few engineers and scientists or computer experts may, in fact, be floating pools
of expertise responsible for setting up new routines, but that is just what they do
— set up new routines for the mass of employees to follow. I think that it is the ...
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內容
WHY BUREAUCRACY? | 1 |
THE INSTITUTIONAL SCHOOL | 7 |
MANAGERIAL IDEOLOGIES AND THE ORIGINS | 58 |
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Administrative Science Quarterly agencies authority Barnard basic behavior Bendix Blau bureaucracy bureaucratic model chapter Charles Perrow Chester Barnard complex conflict contingency theory course criticism decisions departments economic effect Elton Mayo emphasis employees environment example executive firm function ganizations goals Herbert Simon hierarchy hospital human relations movement human relations theory Ibid important increase individual industry institutional interests labor large number leaders leadership levels Likert Marshall Meyer Max Weber ment morale organizational analysis organizational theory organizations output participation performance person personnel Peter Blau Philip Selznick plant political position Press problem productivity professionals programs rational Reinhard Bendix relationship role routine rules scientists Selznick situation social Social Darwinism society Sociology span of control steel structure studies subordinates superior supervisor tasks theorists things tion tional tool University Weber Wilfred Brown workers York