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Letter from the Editor

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  • Anonymous

Abstract

In the age of disruption, affecting the restructuring of industries, social organizations, the organization of work, globalization, international trade, and technological innovations, this issue showcases two disruptions. The Perspective Essay ‘Opportunities and Challenges of Engaged Indigenous Scholarship’, by Andrew H. Van de Ven, Alan D. Meyer, and Runtian T. Jing, followed by the commentary of Anne Tsui, confronts management scholars with the imperative to break out of the straitjacket of testing hypotheses derived from the dominant Western economic, management, and psychological theories with indigenous data. Tsui and Van de Ven, Meyer, and Jing challenge us to rediscover scholarship, which starts with observing actual indigenous phenomena, and employ eye-opening insights and abductive reasoning to arrive at new or different explanatory mechanisms. Data on indigenous phenomena can come from observations of actual phenomena relating to individuals, families, and organizations addressing the limitations of bounded rationality, finding the way, preserving harmony, and so forth, and moderated by indigenous institutional envelopes, history, cultural roots, and national aspirations. Indigenous scholarship welcomes applications of diverse approaches, including qualitative and quantitative data from actual case studies, field surveys, experiments, and ethnographies. This call for indigenous engaged scholarship dovetails with MOR's initiative in favor of the preapproval of research ideas and empirical plans (https://doi.org/10.1017/mor.2017.37), and we hope it will provide scientific legitimacy for indigenous research, which observes actual phenomena and eschews predetermined lenses of Western theories.

Suggested Citation

  • Anonymous, 2018. "Letter from the Editor," Management and Organization Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 14(3), pages 447-448, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:maorev:v:14:y:2018:i:3:p:447-448_1
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    1. David J. G. Slusky & Donna K. Ginther, 2021. "Did Medicaid expansion reduce medical divorce?," Review of Economics of the Household, Springer, vol. 19(4), pages 1139-1174, December.
    2. Beck, Susanne & Prügl, Reinhard & Walter, Katharina, 2020. "Communicating the family firm brand: Antecedents and performance effects," European Management Journal, Elsevier, vol. 38(1), pages 95-107.
    3. Poulis, Konstantinos & Kastanakis, Minas, 2020. "On theorizing and methodological fetishism," European Management Journal, Elsevier, vol. 38(5), pages 676-683.
    4. Yasmin Ibrahim & Anita Howarth, 2021. "The Munchetty controversy: Empire, race, and the BBC," Gender, Work and Organization, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 28(1), pages 231-247, January.
    5. Wilson, J. Holton & Dingus, Rebecca & Hoyle, Jeffrey, 2020. "Women count: Perceptions of forecasting in sales," Business Horizons, Elsevier, vol. 63(5), pages 637-646.
    6. Christofer Herlin & Per Kjaer & Ansgar Espeland & Jan Sture Skouen & Charlotte Leboeuf-Yde & Jaro Karppinen & Jaakko Niinimäki & Joan Solgaard Sørensen & Kjersti Storheim & Tue Secher Jensen, 2018. "Modic changes—Their associations with low back pain and activity limitation: A systematic literature review and meta-analysis," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(8), pages 1-27, August.

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