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Introduction: Business Education and the Social Transformation of American Management
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1 |
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I
The Professionalization Project in American Business Education, 1881-1941
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1
An Occupation in Search of Legitimacy
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23 |
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2
Ideas of Order: Science, the Professions, and the University in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century America
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51 |
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3
The Invention of the University-Based Business School
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87 |
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4
"A Very Ill-Defined Institution": The Business School as Aspiring Professional School
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137 |
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II
The Institutionalization of Business Schools, 1941-1970
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5
The Changing Institutional Field in the Postwar Era
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195 |
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6
Disciplining the Business School Faculty: The Impact of the Foundations
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233 |
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III
The Triumph of the Market and the Abandonment of the Professionalization Project, 1970-the Present
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7
Unintended Consequences: The Post-Ford Business School and the Fall of Managerialism
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291 |
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8
Business Schools in the Marketplace
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333 |
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Epilogue: Ideas of Order Revisited: Markets, Hierarchies, and Communities
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363 |
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Acknowledgments
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385 |
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Bibliographic and Methods Note
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387 |
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Notes
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397 |
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Selected Bibliography
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483 |
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Index
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509 |