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Details
Title
Global and the Local, The.
Author
ISBN
0199205299
9780199205295
9780199205295
9780199205295
9780199205295
Published
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2006.
Copyright
©2006
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (316 pages)
Call Number
HM841
Dewey Decimal Classification
658.049
Summary
" ... There is ... no lack of ambition in this book. And yet, unlike much of what today comes as sociology, it is fun to read, written in a way that combines the very abstract and the very concrete, the principles of general theories and the anecdotes of specific histories, in ways that are enlightening and entertaining at the same time. Those who take the book to heart will find themselves in possession of a language that can speak about 'globalization' in a non-sensationalist manner without, however, in any way detracting from its significance - in fact, quite to the contrary. They will much better and more systematically understand the lasting significance of the local in a world whose horizons of action are expanding."--The Foreword by Wolfgang Streeck, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne. The rhetoric of internationalization and globalization often suggests an inexorable move away from domestic cultural and institutional differences.; Yet the development of internationalization within individual nations has been shaped by those very domestic institutions and cultures, as 'best practice' or other kinds of international learning have been translated into established practice and knowledge. In this important study, Arndt Sorge presents a sociological theory of the development of human societies to explain how business systems evolve and change, and how internationalization works to specify and change societal identities within nations. Examining changes in work, organization, corporate governance, and human resources, Sorge shows how this interaction is a pattern that has been followed over centuries. Indeed, amongst the cases Sorge presents, he concentrates on the example of Germany, a supposedly highly homogeneous and closed society, as evidence for the universality of shifting borders, expanding horizons, local.
Adoption and adaptation of global practices, and the hybridization of systems and standards, as the normal course of social evolution.; Arndt Sorge's analysis of globalization combines rigorous theoretical reasoning with empirically-grounded analysis, and deliberately adopts a general social science approach, drawing on research from Business and Management Studies, Sociology, Political Science, and History.
Adoption and adaptation of global practices, and the hybridization of systems and standards, as the normal course of social evolution.; Arndt Sorge's analysis of globalization combines rigorous theoretical reasoning with empirically-grounded analysis, and deliberately adopts a general social science approach, drawing on research from Business and Management Studies, Sociology, Political Science, and History.
Note
Adoption and adaptation of global practices, and the hybridization of systems and standards, as the normal course of social evolution.; Arndt Sorge's analysis of globalization combines rigorous theoretical reasoning with empirically-grounded analysis, and deliberately adopts a general social science approach, drawing on research from Business and Management Studies, Sociology, Political Science, and History.
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