Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Managerialism> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Managerialism abstract "Managerialism is a belief in the value of professional managers and the concepts and methods they use. It is associated with hierarchy, accountability and measurement, and a belief in the importance of tightly managed organisations, as opposed to individuals, or groups that do not resemble an organisation.In his book Managerialism : the emergence of a new ideology, Willard F. Enteman argued that managerialism is the ideological principle that says that societies are equivalent to the sum of the transactions made by the managements of organizations.Historian James Hoopes wrote that "The main origin of Managerialism lay in the human relations movement that took root at the Harvard Business School in the 1920s and 1930s under the guiding hand of Professor Elton Mayo. Mayo, an immigrant from Australia, saw democracy as divisive and lacking in community spirit. He looked to corporate managers to restore the social harmony that he believed the uprooting experiences of immigration and industrialization had destroyed and that democracy was incapable of repairing."".
- Managerialism wikiPageID "7128959".
- Managerialism wikiPageLength "9812".
- Managerialism wikiPageOutDegree "9".
- Managerialism wikiPageRevisionID "683194849".
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Management.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_philosophy.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Public_administration.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Elton_Mayo.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink James_Burnham.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink New_Public_Management.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink New_public_management.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Performance_measurement.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Technocracy.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Technocracy_(bureaucratic).
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLink Willard_F._Enteman.
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Managerialism".
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Managerialism#New_Managerialism".
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLinkText "managerial practices".
- Managerialism wikiPageWikiLinkText "managerialism".
- Managerialism hasPhotoCollection Managerialism.
- Managerialism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Managerialism subject Category:Management.
- Managerialism subject Category:Political_philosophy.
- Managerialism subject Category:Public_administration.
- Managerialism hypernym Belief.
- Managerialism type Article.
- Managerialism type Organisation.
- Managerialism type Article.
- Managerialism type Science.
- Managerialism type Subfield.
- Managerialism comment "Managerialism is a belief in the value of professional managers and the concepts and methods they use. It is associated with hierarchy, accountability and measurement, and a belief in the importance of tightly managed organisations, as opposed to individuals, or groups that do not resemble an organisation.In his book Managerialism : the emergence of a new ideology, Willard F.".
- Managerialism label "Managerialism".
- Managerialism sameAs الادارياتية.
- Managerialism sameAs Managerialismo.
- Managerialism sameAs Menedžerizmas.
- Managerialism sameAs m.0h5p8s.
- Managerialism sameAs Q282750.
- Managerialism sameAs Q282750.
- Managerialism sameAs 管理主義.
- Managerialism wasDerivedFrom Managerialism?oldid=683194849.
- Managerialism isPrimaryTopicOf Managerialism.