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In praise of holistic scholarship: A collective essay in memory of Mark Easterby-Smith

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Sarah Robinson, University of Glasgow
  • ,
  • Alessia Contu, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • ,
  • Carole Elliott, University of Sheffield
  • ,
  • Suzanne Gagnon, University of Manitoba
  • ,
  • Elena Antonacopoulou, Western University
  • ,
  • Pavel Bogolyubov, Lancaster University
  • ,
  • Mary Crossan, Western University
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  • Ann Cunliffe, FGV-EAESP
  • ,
  • Bente Elkjaer
  • Manuel Graça, University of Porto
  • ,
  • Selen Kars, University of the West of England
  • ,
  • Shenxue Li, University of Kent
  • ,
  • Marjorie Lyles, Indiana University Bloomington
  • ,
  • Robin Snell, Lingnan University
  • ,
  • Wayne St Amour, NSCC
  • ,
  • Valerie Stead, Lancaster University
  • ,
  • Richard Thorpe, University of Leeds
  • ,
  • Dusya Vera, University of Houston

This collective essay was born out of a desire to honor and remember Professor Mark Easterby-Smith, a founder of the Management Learning community. To do this, we invited community members to share their experiences of working with Mark. The resulting narratives remember Mark as a co-author, co-researcher, project manager, conference organizer, research leader, PhD supervisor, and much more. The memories cover many different aspects of Mark’s academic spectrum: from evaluation to research methods to cross-cultural management, to dynamic capabilities, naming but a few. This space for remembrance however developed into a space of reflection and conceptualization. Inspired by the range and extent of Mark’s interests, skills, experiences, and personal qualities, this essay became conceptual as well as personal as we turned the spotlight on academic careers and consider alternative paths for Management Learning scholarship today. Using the collective representations of Mark’s career as a starting point, we develop, the concept of holistic scholarship, which embraces certain attitudes and orientations in navigating the dialectical spaces and transcending tensions in academic life. We reflect on how such holistic scholarship can be practised in our contemporary and challenging times and what inspiration and lessons we can draw from Mark’s legacy.

Original languageEnglish
JournalManagement Learning
Volume53
Issue2
Pages (from-to)363-385
Number of pages23
ISSN1350-5076
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022

    Research areas

  • Academic holism, holistic scholarship, management learning, organizational learning, Organisatorisk læring, Læring

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