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THE IMPLICATIONS OF ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING FOR ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION: A REVIEW AND REFORMULATION
Author(s) -
Craig C. Lundberg,
Judi Brownell
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
the international journal of organizational analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1055-3185
DOI - 10.1108/eb028782
Subject(s) - organizational learning , organizational studies , organizational engineering , organization development , organizational behavior and human resources , organizational commitment , organizational communication , organizational performance , knowledge management , organizational effectiveness , organizational change , organizational safety , psychology , computer science , public relations , social psychology , political science
This manuscript explores the contributions of organizational learning to organizational communication. The study of organizational communication is seen in multi‐dimensional terms as the study of how meanings are created, stored, distributed, and modified in the service of organizational performance and change. An overview of organizational communication is provided and organizational learning and its main assumptions are explained. The authors then demonstrate how the incorporation of organizational learning concepts into organizational communication theory permit the integration and extension of much of what is known about how organizational members communicate, learn, and change. An integrative model is presented which explains how individual and organizational understandings are interrelated.

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