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Produktbild: Management of Extreme Situations

Management of Extreme Situations From Polar Expeditions to Exploration-Oriented Organizations

199,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.12.2019

Herausgeber

Pascal Lièvre + weitere

Verlag

ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

448

Maße (L/B/H)

23,6/16,3/2,8 cm

Gewicht

739 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-78630-129-1

Beschreibung

Portrait

Pascal Lièvre is Professor in Management Sciences at Clermont Auvergne University, France.

Monique Aubry is Professor of Project Management at the Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada.

Gilles Garel is Professor of Innovation Management at the National Conservatory of Arts and Crafts, France.

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.12.2019

Herausgeber

Verlag

ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

448

Maße (L/B/H)

23,6/16,3/2,8 cm

Gewicht

739 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-78630-129-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Management of Extreme Situations
  • Preface xvii

    Cerisy Symposiums. Selection of Publications xxi

    Introduction xxv

    Part 1. Exploration and the Extreme 1

    Section 1. The Logic of Exploration 3

    Chapter 1. An Exemplary Exploration Story: Nansen's Expedition to the North Pole 5
    Pascal LIÈVRE

    1.1. Introduction 5

    1.2. A project that makes "sense" because it is consistent with an identity-based learning trajectory 7

    1.3. A radical dual ambidextrous capacity 9

    1.3.1. Planning 10

    1.3.2. Adaptation 11

    1.3.3. Exploration 12

    1.3.4. Exploitation 12

    1.4. A dynamic of knowledge expansion in terms of an epistemic community 13

    1.4.1. The Intention 14

    1.4.2. The spark 15

    1.4.3. The manifesto 15

    1.4.4. Various experts who formed a community around the project 15

    1.4.5. A continuous increase in implementing knowledge 16

    1.5. Conclusion 16

    1.6. References 17

    Chapter 2. Project Management in Extreme Situations: The Manhattan Case 21
    Sylvain LENFLE

    2.1. Introduction 21

    2.2. The origins of the Manhattan project 22

    2.3. Exploring the unknown 23

    2.4. The Manhattan Project organization 26

    2.5. Project management as sensemaking 29

    2.6. The expansive legacy of the Manhattan project and the limit of the metaphor 32

    2.7. References 34

    Section 2. Exploration Testimonies 37

    Chapter 3. Exploration, the Common Theme of a Training System on Innovation 39
    Bruno STÉVENIN and Éric DÉPRAETERE

    3.1. The initial context at the origin of the adventure 39

    3.2. The launch and preparation of the training program characteristic of exploration 40

    3.3. The heart of program design: a step-by-step exploration 42

    3.4. The transition to exploitation 49

    3.5. Conclusion 52

    3.6. 2017, Toward future explorations 53

    3.7. References 53

    Chapter 4. A New Progress Technique in the Himalayas 55
    Paulo GROBEL

    4.1. Introduction 55

    4.2. The Himalayan technique, a reference 55

    4.3. The emergence of new strategies 56

    4.4. But also, listening to the doctors' recommendations... 57

    4.5. "Doing it together" 57

    4.6. Snail strategy, gentle progression, slow expedition, continuous progression? 58

    4.6.1. Toward a name change 58

    4.6.2. We have therefore named our strategy "progression douce" (gentle progression) 59

    4.6.3. The gentle progression has become "the snail's strategy" 59

    4.6.4. The snail strategy has been transformed into a slow expedition 60

    4.6.5. Slow expedition now becomes continuous progress 60

    4.7. Not to conclude.... 60

    Section 3. Toward an Extreme Ethnography 63

    Chapter 5. Some Methodological Considerations in Relation to the Objects Involved 65
    Mondher KILANI

    Chapter 6. Ethnography of the Extreme: Epistemological and Methodological Issues of the Use of Video 75
    Géraldine RIX-LIÈVRE

    6.1. Introduction 75

    6.2. An involved and involving ethnography 77

    6.3. Interests and limitations of the use of video in the production of materials 79

    6.4. Video, a modality of ethnographic writing 81

    6.5. Video, for an ethnography of activity 83

    6.6. References 88

    Part 2. Creativity and Organizational Reliability 91

    Section 4. Organizational Creativity 93

    Chapter 7. Management of a Crisis Situation in a Large Video Game Studio 95
    Patrick COHENDET and Laurent SIMON

    7.1. Introduction 95

    7.2. A creativity crisis at Ubisoft's studio 96

    7.3. Management of a major crisis 99

    7.3.1. Bisociation 99

    7.3.2. The recomposition of routines by a sequence of bisociations 101

    7.4. Conclusion 103

    7.5. References 103

    Chapter 8. Organizing Innovative Design or How to Remain an Explorer: The Case of Creaholic 105
    Gilles GAREL

    8.1. Introduction 105

    8.2. Innovative design and ambidextry 106

    8.2.1. Forms of ambidexterity 107

    8.2.2. Ambidextrous relationships 109

    8.3. The case of Creaholic, an innovative design company 110

    8.3.1. Creaholic, an IDE that produces repeated innovation 110

    8.3.2. A relevant governance structure 112

    8.4. Discussion and conclusion: the IDE and a return to exploitation 116

    8.5. References 119

    Section 5. Creativity under Constraint 121

    Chapter 9. Creativity under Constraint: A Management Sciences Perspective 123
    Guy PARMENTIER

    9.1. Introduction 123

    9.2. The different types of constraints and their actions 124

    9.3. Internal design and cognitive constraints 125

    9.4. Situational time and resource constraints 127

    9.5. Border constraints 129

    9.6. The construction of the sense of constraints 130

    9.7. Organizational climate 131

    9.8. Conclusion 133

    9.9. References 133

    Chapter 10. Creativity for Extreme Situations 139
    Samira BOURGEOIS-BOUGRINE and Todd LUBART

    10.1. Introduction 139

    10.2. Introduction to creativity 140

    10.2.1. Definition of creativity 140

    10.2.2. Creative processes 141

    10.3. Creativity and risk management 143

    10.3.1. Creativity, insight and intuition when making decisions in extreme situations 144

    10.3.2. Creativity and daily risk management 147

    10.4. Creativity for anticipating extreme situations 148

    10.4.1. What can we learn from fiction writers? 149

    10.4.2. Co-creativity in a virtual environment 151

    10.5. Conclusion 153

    10.6. References 154

    Section 6. Organizational Reliability 159

    Chapter 11. Scope and Limits of Extreme Situations for Highly Reliable Organizations: A Pragmatic Interpretation 161
    Benoît JOURNÉ

    11.1. Introduction 161

    11.2. The growing interest in extreme situations 161

    11.3. The pragmatist approach to situations 162

    11.4. HROs: keeping extreme situations under control 163

    11.5. The mutual influence of situations and organization: between normality and extremity 164

    11.6. Extremity traps and extreme situations 165

    11.7. Conditions for a contribution of extreme situations to the knowledge of situations and organizations 166

    11.8. References 167

    Chapter 12. Error in Decision-Making Processes in Operational Situations: The Case of Fire Rescue Organizations 169
    Anaïs GAUTIER

    12.1. Introduction 169

    12.2. The study of ordinary situations in codified activities for decision making 170

    12.2.1. Extreme and unique contexts of at-risk organizations 170

    12.2.2. Situation awareness theory to understand the cognitive process of actors 171

    12.2.3. Reasoning error for a cognitive approach 171

    12.3. Action-research methodology for analysing decision making in situations 172

    12.4. The case of the organization of rescue operations in forest firefighting operations: the management of cross-border operations 174

    12.4.1. Definition of the extreme context of the forest firefighting operation 174

    12.4.2. Application of situation awareness theory to the identification of the decision-making process 175

    12.5. Perception of error as a practice for learning 177

    12.6. References 178

    Part 3. Register of the Intelligibility of Extreme Management Situations 181

    Section 7. Meaning and Sensemaking 183

    Chapter 13. Going to Extreme Situations: What Meaning Should be Given to Such a Project? 185
    Jean-Pierre BOUTINET

    13.1. Introduction 185

    13.2. Why go on a journey or an expedition? 186

    13.3. The unavoidable concern of the quest for meaning 187

    13.4. The project approach that generates meaning 188

    13.5. The meaning of a project for its stakeholders: author and actors 190

    13.6. The uncertainties linked to the project when thinking about extreme situations 192

    13.7. What meaning should be given to the willingness to undertake the project? 193

    13.7.1. Where can we go? 193

    13.7.2. Why leave? 194

    13.7.3. What significant opportunities dictate the current situation? 195

    13.7.4. How does my current questioning resonate with my personal history? 196

    13.7.5. Whom to carry out a project with? 197

    13.8. To start a project, the art of steering a boat 198

    13.9. References 200

    Chapter 14. Sense, Sensitivity and Competence 201
    Michel RÉCOPÉ

    14.1. Introduction 201

    14.2. Norms, actions and cognitive activity 202

    14.3. Meaning or sense? 203

    14.4. Proposal for "common sense" 204

    14.5. "Sensitivity to" and practical rationality 206

    14.6. "Sensitivity to" and structured activity 208

    14.7. "Sensitivity to" and competence 210

    14.8. What about extreme situations according to this approach? 210

    14.9. References 211

    Chapter 15. A Sea Kayaker's Identity Route and Learning Experience in the Arctic 215
    Pascal CROSET

    15.1. Genesis 215

    15.2. 2007: the initiation 216

    15.3. 2008: the road to autonomy 216

    15.4. 2009: fraternity 218

    15.5. 2010: learning about limits, and the need for sharing 219

    15.6. 2011: the discovery of a new territory 220

    15.7. 2012: teaming up with a (nearly) unknown person 221

    15.8. 2013: filiation (1) 222

    15.9. 2014: the parallel world 223

    15.10. 2015: filiation (2) 224

    15.11. 2016: filiation (3) between adults 225

    15.12. 2017: serenity and satisfaction 225

    15.13. Knowledge and self-improvement, more than an identity journey 226

    15.14. Putting everything into perspective 227

    15.15. Conclusion 228

    Section 8. Organizational Ambidexterity 229

    Chapter 16. Organizational Ambidexterity: The Double Organic Ambidexterity 231
    Monique AUBRY

    16.1. Summary 231

    16.2. Double ambidexterity: an essential skill of the project manager 232

    16.3. From polar expedition to organizational change 232

    16.4. Methodological aspects 234

    16.5. Identifying mode changes: transitions 234

    16.5.1. Case A 235

    16.5.2. Case B 235

    16.5.3. Case C 235

    16.6. Organic ambidexterity as a meta-competency 236

    16.7. Conclusion 237

    16.8. Acknowledgments 238

    16.9. Appendix: changes in mode of action in all three cases 239

    16.10. References 240

    Chapter 17. Radical Change in an Extreme Context: Mountaineers Conquering the Darwin Cordillera in Patagonia 243
    Geneviève MUSCA

    17.1 Introduction 243

    17.2. The episode of radical change 244

    17.3. Implementation of a radical change in an extreme context 246

    17.4. Methodology 247

    17.5. The implementation of radical change: from boat to bags 248

    17.6. References 250

    Section 9. The Expansion of Knowledge 253

    Chapter 18. A Knowledge Corpus and Innovation 255
    Jean-Louis ERMINE and Pierre SAULAIS

    18.1. Creativity is not only based on imagination 255

    18.2. The use of existing knowledge to improve creativity 258

    18.3. Case study: a creative process based on knowledge in Thales Air Systems 260

    18.3.1. The creative environment 260

    18.3.2. The creative process based on knowledge 263

    18.4. Lessons learned and conditions for success 267

    18.5. Appendix 268

    18.6. References 270

    Chapter 19. Community of Practice, Variation of Knowledge and Change in Extreme Management Situations 273
    Jean-Philippe BOOTZ and Olivier DUPOUËT

    19.1. Introduction 273

    19.2 Emerging change and knowledge variation through spontaneous CoPs 274

    19.2.1. Change as an emerging process 274

    19.2.2. CoPs as a mechanism for developing and modifying practices 275

    19.3. Change leads to constellations of communities 276

    19.3.1. Knowledge variation and change within communities of practice 276

    19.3.2. Propagation and combinations of variations in a constellation of communities 277

    19.4. Induced change, knowledge expansion and pilot communities of practice 279

    19.4.1. Leading change through managed communities of practice: a tension of self-organization/control 280

    19.4.2. PCoPs and knowledge expansion: exploration and exploitation 282

    19.5. Conclusion 285

    19.6. References 285

    Chapter 20. Expanding Knowledge and Mobilizing Social Networks 289
    Marc LECOUTRE

    20.1. Introduction 289

    20.2. Innovation, network and knowledge expansion 290

    20.3. Expanding knowledge: two examples in uncertain and risky situations 290

    20.3.1. An example of the acquisition of scientific knowledge during the preparation for a polar expedition 291

    20.3.2. An example of experiential learning: the crossing of Spitsbergen by a team of young students with little experience 291

    20.4. The contributions of the two streams of research in social network theory 292

    20.4.1. The approach by distinguishing ties according to their strength (Granovetter 1973) 292

    20.4.2. The structural approach 294

    20.5. Feedback and questions on these approaches 295

    20.5.1. First question: the nature of the tie 295

    20.5.2. Second question: the nature of knowledge 296

    20.5.3. Third question: the nature of the process 297

    20.6. The question of the nature of ties the notion of a "potentially strong" weak tie 298

    20.7. Conclusion: relational network and process of knowledge expansion 300

    20.8. References 301

    Chapter 21. The Crowd and the Expansion of Knowledge 305
    Claude GUITTARD and Éric SCHENK

    21.1. Introduction 305

    21.2. The crowds and knowledge 306

    21.2.1. The crowd, the company and the market 306

    21.2.2. The factors of crowd irrationality 306

    21.3. Crowds and the media 309

    21.4. The new visions of the crowd 310

    21.5. Internet: towards a wise crowd? 311

    21.6. Crowds and knowledge expansion: crowdsourcing 312

    21.6.1. The different types of crowdsourcing 312

    21.6.2. Crowdsourcing and knowledge expansion 317

    21.7. Conclusion 319

    21.8. References 320

    Part 4 The Variety of Extreme Situations and Disciplinary Perspectives 323

    Section 10. The Variety of Extreme Situations 325

    Chapter 22. The Routines of Creation: From Artistic Direction to Collective Exploration 327
    David MASSÉ

    22.1. Introduction 327

    22.2. Three training schemes in the creative industries 328

    22.2.1. Guy Laliberté and the transformation of athletes into artists at Cirque du Soleil 328

    22.2.2. Serge Hascoët and game design training at Ubisoft 329

    22.2.3. Bartabas and the Académie du spectacle équestre de Versailles 329

    22.3. The routines of creation: from artistic direction to the collective exploration of talents 330

    22.3.1. Macro-routines: the "direction" links given by the creator 331

    22.3.2. Micro-routines: exploration spaces for talent 333

    22.4. Conclusion 335

    22.4.1. Trick 1: highlighting practice in transmission 336

    22.4.2. Trick 2: fostering accommodation through the reduction of feedback 336

    22.4.3. Trick 3: creating an environment conducive to uncertainty 337

    22.5. References 337

    Chapter 23. The Young Researcher Program for Extreme Situations 339
    Christelle BARON, Emmanuel BONNET, Stéphane CELLIER-COURTIL, Nicolas LAROCHE and Isabelle MAGNE

    23.1. Introduction 339

    23.2. What is a power that promotes the emergence of potential action among actors in situations of uncertainty? 340

    23.3. The terms of engagement and the processes for regulating collective action in the context of the liberated company: the case of Crédit Agricole Centre Loire 341

    23.4. The rules of the game of an epistemic community 342

    23.5. Constructing action knowledge for a wealth management advisor 343

    23.6. Rethinking logistics from knowledge flows 344

    23.7. Conclusion 345

    23.8. References 346

    Section 11. Disciplinary Perspectives 351

    Chapter 24. Knowledge Transfer and Learning in Extreme Situations: The Psychologist's Vision 353
    Jean-Claude COULET

    24.1. Introduction 353

    24.2. Knowledge transfer: a questionable notion 354

    24.2.1. The notions of knowledge 354

    24.2.2. The development of knowledge 355

    24.3. Learning: theoretical considerations 357

    24.3.1. A modeling of skills 357

    24.3.2. Forms of learning 359

    24.4 Collective skills, learning and strategic management 360

    24.4.1. Knowledge in practice 360

    24.4.2. The hierarchy of skills 361

    24.4.3. The articulation between individual and collective skills 361

    24.5. Conclusion 363

    24.6. References 364

    Chapter 25. Expeditions as a Legitimate Object in Management Sciences 367
    Linda ROULEAU

    25.1. Introduction 367

    25.2. Expeditions as "legitimate objects"? 368

    25.3 Generalization, rigor and relevance in articles in peer-reviewed journals dealing with expeditions 370

    25.4. Challenges of producing "legitimate" knowledge from the expedition as an empirical object 373

    25.5. References 375

    Conclusion 377
    Gilles GAREL, Monique AUBRY and Pascal LIÈVRE

    List of Authors 385

    Index 389