Rethinking the Performance of Management Education, some elements for a more socially

Are management faculties teaching socially desirable principles? Are management alumni generating beneficial impacts in society? How effective and sustainable are the practices nurtured by business schools? This paper is triggered by the obligation to reflect about the social accountability that shoul...

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Autores:
Castrillón-Orrego, Sergio A.
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
2007
Institución:
Universidad EAFIT
Repositorio:
Repositorio EAFIT
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.eafit.edu.co:10784/16283
Acceso en línea:
http://hdl.handle.net/10784/16283
Palabra clave:
Management Education
Business Schools
Social Responsibility
Stakeholder Management
Impacts
Programs
Policies
Individual Discretion
Educación en Administración
Escuelas de Negocios
Responsabilidad Social
Grupos de Interés
Impactos
Programas
Políticas
Discreción Individual
Rights
License
Copyright © 2007 Sergio A. Castrillón-Orrego
Description
Summary:Are management faculties teaching socially desirable principles? Are management alumni generating beneficial impacts in society? How effective and sustainable are the practices nurtured by business schools? This paper is triggered by the obligation to reflect about the social accountability that should be expected in the field of ME; insisting on the need to acknowledge the pervasive ubiquity of business, and the structuring role that management education –ME- plays within society. Pondering the question of ‘how ME performance should be assessed and improved?’, this article adapts Donna Wood’s model of Corporate Social Performance as a frame of reference to rethink the responsibility of management education through the exploration of principles of social responsibility, processes of responsiveness, and outcomes of behavior. While the existence of multiple levels of analysis is acknowledged -institutional, organizational, and individual-, emphasis is placed upon the reflection of the discretionary power - its limits and possibilities- that individual professors and researchers might have.