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Introduction: Knowledge Construction and Creation in Organizations *
Author(s) -
Tsoukas Haridimos,
Mylonopoulos Nikos
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
british journal of management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.407
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 1467-8551
pISSN - 1045-3172
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8551.2004.t01-2-00402.x
Subject(s) - organizational learning , knowledge management , perspective (graphical) , incentive , work (physics) , organizational studies , politics , knowledge value chain , business , political science , computer science , engineering , economics , mechanical engineering , artificial intelligence , microeconomics , law
While adopting a knowledge‐based perspective on organizations has been valuable, since, among other things, it enables us to see links between organizational learning and a firm's competitive advantage through the development of idiosyncratic capabilities, it has nonetheless tended to treat organizational knowledge as ‘given’, exploring how it is related to other ‘given’ variables. The focus of this special issue is to unpack the notion of organizational knowledge by exploring the processes and practices through which knowledge is constructed and created in organizations. A constructivist perspective assumes that ‘knowledge’ presupposes work and seeks to explore how what comes to be considered as organizational knowledge is established and validated (or fails to do so). By seeing organizational knowledge as work we can further probe into how knowledge is shaped by organizational strategies and incentives and, more radically, how power and politics influence the struggle between competing bodies of knowledge in organizations.

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