Corporate and Organizational Identities

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academic conference proceedings
AFM
authority
Brand Driver
Brand Identity
Brand Platform
Category=KJM
Channel Expansion Theory
collective identity dynamics
Corporate Brand
Corporate Brand's Identity
Corporate Brand’s Identity
Corporate Identity
Corporate Story
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
experienced
Experienced Identity
five-facet framework for identity
Gene Therapy
Hasselt
identity
Identity Attribute
Identity Dissonance
identity management consultancy
Identity Transfers
interdisciplinary management studies
Lawyer's Duty
Lawyer’s Duty
mix
organisational behaviour research
Organizational Identity
Organizational Members Experience
organizations
Part III
port
Port Authority
riel
strategic management theory
sustainable
Sustainable Corporate Story
van
Visual Identity
Weak Identifiers
york
Young Man
Zealous Representation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415282048
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jul 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This edited book is devoted to an issue of increasing importance in management theory and practice-organizational identity. The concept of organizational identity has received attention in many disciplines such as strategic management, marketing, communication and public relations and organization theory. In practice a number of consultancy firms have specialized in identity management, while a number of academic conferences with a special focus on identity has developed. As globalisation of business and of organizations of all kinds become the norm rather than the exception, issues of collective identities take on a strategic importance. There has been, however, very little integration among the various disciplines and practices, resulting in conflicting definitions, and little cumulative research. The aim of Organizational Identities is to further understanding about collective identities by bringing together contributions from various management disciplines. To this end, the editors have developed an integrative framework - the five-facet framework - that allows articulation of contributions from disciplines as diverse as strategic management, organization theory, marketing and communication. Sixteen scholars from Europe and the US have contributed nine chapters that explore various aspects of collective identities using this five-facet framework. The result is the first book to bring together contributions from various fields and integrate them into a single conceptual framework. The book will be useful both for academics and for practitioners. It includes a balance of theoretical and empirical chapters, and presents original empirical data drawn from field research in a variety of settings.

Bertrand Moingeon, Guillaume Soenen