Abstract

Development in Work and Organizational Psychology: Implications for International Business, by Paul Jackson and Manfusa Shams (Eds.). Elsevier Publishing, 2006, 314 pages (ISBN: 978-0-08-044467-3, CA$99.95) Reviewed by TERRIR. LITUCHY DOI : 10.1037/0708-5591.49.1.71 The title of this book, Development in Work and Organizational Psychology: Implications for International Business intrigued me. When the book editor asked me to review it, as a cross-cultural management researcher who does work with colleagues in psychology and in international business, I was happy to do so. This book is part of the Elsevier International Business and Management Series. Jackson and Shams state that the objective of this book is to give authoritative accounts of developments within work and organisational psychology for students and practitioners of international business. The editors emphasise that this book or any edited book cannot be a comprehensive work on all of the areas in organisational psychology, so they selected leading scholars from the United Kingdom and North America and invited these researchers to select a topic in their area of expertise. From this reflective practitioner's perspective, the volume becomes a miscellany of chapters, some of which international business scholars would not consider to be international business. The main topics in international business (IB) include such things as international trade, foreign direct investment, global monetary system, international strategy, importing and exporting, global manufacturing and operations management, international marketing, global or international human resources management, international accounting, international finance, the international environment, economic and socioeconomic and sociocultural forces, and political and legal environment. The introduction, by Shams and Jackson, restates that the purpose of the book is to present thoughtful analyses of some major developments in work and organisational psychology, with a focus on international business and management. They further state that the book is expected to benefit students, scholars, and practitioners of international business. While I find many of the chapters of interest and of use to students, the book has not appeared to achieve its goals or (there are actually five specific aims and several others stated in the preface and introduction to the book). The first chapter, Issues in Family Business: An International Perspective by Shams and Bjornberg, has too much background on defining family business (about 15 pages) given that this book is part of a management series and intended for researchers and practitioners in business. The psychological perspective on family is less than two pages and neither directly linked to family business nor international business. Chapter 2, Teamworking in Organizations: Implications for Workplace Safety, compares research on safety in organisations between three types of groups: (a) health and safety committees, (b) autonomous work teams, and (c) cockpit crews. Identity and Identification Processes in Mergers and Joint Ventures is the title bf Chapter 3. This is a very interesting article. However, within it, there appears to be nothing specifically related to organisational psychology or international business. Chapter 4 on Global Human Resources Management (GHRM) is one of the best in the book. It incorporates work psychology issues into GHRM. Paul Sparrow starts with the aim of the chapter defines and compares IHRM and GHRM, introduces psychological processes and then discusses the international mindset, international team, and adjustment. Many of the references that the author uses when introducing organisational psychology to international business are references from business and management journals or books are not especially recent. McLean Parks and smith have an interesting title for Chapter 5, Ghost Workers: Implications of New Workforce Realities for Organizations and Their Workers. …

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call