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GSJ Special Issue

  • 1.  GSJ Special Issue

    Posted 02-12-2013 16:22
    GLOBAL STRATEGY JOURNAL

    Call for Papers for a Special Issue

    THE JOINT IMPACT OF GLOBAL STRATEGY AND ORGANIZATIONAL LEARNING

    Submission Due Date: April 1, 2013

    Guest Editors:
    Jasper J. Hotho, Copenhagen Business School (Denmark)
    Marjorie A. Lyles, Indiana University (USA) – Supervising Editor
    Mark Easterby-Smith, Lancaster University (UK)

    Background and Purpose
    A significant part of research on global strategy, international business (IB) and international
    management focuses explicitly on issues of knowledge, innovations and learning. These issues cover
    a range of topics such as how internationalizing firms gain knowledge about foreign market
    environments and learn to operate across nations, to the challenges associated with transferring
    knowledge across borders and the learning processes surrounding international joint ventures.
    Indeed, both the raison d’être of the multinational enterprise and its (geographical) boundaries are
    commonly presented as functions of knowledge and learning processes.

    In theorizing about such issues, global strategy scholars often turn to the literatures on
    organizational learning, knowledge, and innovation. These streams of literature infuse our theories
    on multinational organizations by providing core concepts and definitions for organizational
    learning. In addition, advances in the learning literature also impact the global strategy research
    agenda. Developments in organizational learning and innovative approaches to knowledge research,
    such as on organizational ambidexterity, absorptive capacity or the social facets of knowledge
    integration, spur new research efforts that enrich our insights into the complex workings of
    multinational organizations.

    Despite extensive work on issues of knowing and learning in the global strategy field, the impact of
    global strategy research on the organizational learning literature has been limited. This is surprising,
    as research on multinational organizations has considerable potential to advance learning research.
    For instance, not only are multinational organizations excellent sites for studying some of the more
    complex learning and knowledge processes, but the variability in the contexts in which
    multinationals operate also provides opportunities for the identification of relevant contingency
    factors, or for reflection on the universality of organizational learning processes. Thus, global
    strategy research offers distinct advantages to validate and extend existing learning theories, as well
    as to develop new, contextualized perspectives on the creation, retention and dispersion of
    knowledge.

    With this special issue we set out to change the view of global strategy research as passively
    ‘borrowing’ advances made in organizational learning research. We intend to highlight that global
    strategy research can, in distinctive ways, actively enrich and contribute to our understanding of
    organizational knowing and learning. With this GSJ issue, we therefore aim to provide a venue for
    exemplary studies on global strategy that impact and advance the broader fields of organizational
    learning and knowledge management. The envisioned contributions in this special issue may, for
    instance, highlight new antecedents and important contingency factors, explore relations between
    learning at different levels, or critically assess and examine the universality of theories of learning
    and knowledge.

    Research Questions
    We seek studies that contribute to the literatures on organizational learning and knowledge
    management through effective and innovative use of global strategy research contexts. However we
    recognize as well that research on organizational learning, knowledge and innovation also
    significantly affects global strategy theory. We want to include those articles as well that address
    organizational learning and its contribution to the theory of MNCs, global strategy, and
    internationalization.

    We explicitly invite contributions on a wide range of topics related to organizational knowing and
    learning, including, but certainly not limited to, knowledge creation and knowledge transfer, valuing
    knowledge assets, absorptive capacity and knowledge integration, situated and practice-based
    learning, organizational unlearning and forgetting, and the development of dynamic capabilities.

    In line with GSJ’s editorial policy, we welcome contributions that draw on a wide variety of
    approaches, whether quantitative or qualitative. We also encourage submissions that address and
    cross different levels of analysis, such as the individual, team, organizational, or institutional
    contexts. Finally, we equally welcome conceptual contributions that make constructive use of
    insights from IB and global strategy theory to inform organizational learning.

    The following are illustrative, rather than exhaustive, of the types of research questions what would
    fit well within the scope of this special issue:

    1. How are dynamic capabilities and their impact on competitiveness and performance affected by
    wider societal structures?
    2. Are there links between the practices of global strategy and the processes of learning?
    3. What are the effects of culture on knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer, and what is the
    relative influence of different formal and informal integration mechanisms on these relationships?
    4. What is the relative importance of organizational unlearning and forgetting versus knowledge
    accumulation for the internationalization process of firms?
    5. What internal and external factors shape the interactions within and across communities of
    practice, and how does this affect situated learning within organizational units?
    6. How do organizational and institutional structures interact to affect knowledge transfer and
    adoption?

    Submission Instructions
    The deadline for submissions is April 1, 2013. All submissions will be subject to the regular double-
    blind peer review process at GSJ. To learn more about Global Strategy Journal, including additional
    information on the submission process, please visit the Global Strategy Journal website at:
    http://gsj.strategicmanagement.net/


    More Information
    To obtain additional information or volunteer to review, please contact the special issue editors:
    • Jasper Hotho, Copenhagen Business School (jjh.smg@cbs.dk)
    • Marjorie A. Lyles, Indiana University (mlyles@iupui.edu)
    • Mark Easterby-Smith, Lancaster University (m.easterby-smith@lancaster.ac.uk)
    Or contact the Managing Editor of the GSJ, Lois Gast (lgast@wiley.com).

    Posted by:
    Stephen Tallman
    Co-Editor, GSJ
    E. Claiborne Robins Distinguished Professor of Business
    Robins School of Business
    University of Richmond
    28 Westhampton Way
    Richmond, VA 23173
    804-287-6589
    stallman@richmond.edu