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The Cold War origin of action research as managerialist cooptation
Managerial applications of action research (AR) (e.g. in Organization Development) have been critiqued as cooptational. Their participatory focus on means over ends of change, on micro-, intra-organizational issues, and the tacit but questionable claim to rigour, are said to conceal and reinforce ex...
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Published in: | Human relations (New York) 2006-05, Vol.59 (5), p.665-693 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Managerial applications of action research (AR) (e.g. in Organization Development)
have been critiqued as cooptational. Their participatory focus on means over ends of
change, on micro-, intra-organizational issues, and the tacit but questionable claim
to rigour, are said to conceal and reinforce existing power relationships, rather
than deliver the meaningful empowerment promised. This article shows an empirical
connection between the Cold War US and these problematic features of today’s
managerialist AR. Drawing on a correspondence between Ronald Lippitt and John
Collier, two AR founders, it shows a more profoundly socially engaged version of AR
was proposed, but shut down by US Cold War inquisition. It was in response to this
alternative version of action research that the problematic, now managerialist,
version of AR was first consciously and deliberately articulated. This shows that
managerialist AR’s self-detachment from social circumstances is evident not just in
its application, but its historiography |
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ISSN: | 0018-7267 1741-282X |
DOI: | 10.1177/0018726706066176 |