The Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution: A Case Study of Port Development in China

The Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution: A Case Study of Port Development in China book cover

The Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution: A Case Study of Port Development in China

Author(s): John Child (Author), Kenneth K.-T. Tse (Author), Suzana B. Rodrigues (Author)

  • Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Publication Date: 29 Mar. 2013
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 304 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1849807434
  • ISBN-13: 9781849807432

Book Description

Offering insights of unusual richness, this book examines one of the world’s most important business environments to determine the way that organizations can develop through interaction with their environments. It fills a gap in our understanding of the evolution of the Chinese business environment and throws light on the theory of co-evolution in order to inspire management practice.

Written on the basis of a collaboration between a leading business manager and renowned university scholars, this groundbreaking book makes a significant contribution both to theory and practice of competitive strategy.

Contents:
Part I: Introduction, Perspective and Method
1. Introduction
2. The Co-evolutionary Perspective
3. Research Design and Methodology
Part II: Environment, Evolution and Managerial Initiative
4. Yantian Port and its Changing Environment
5. The Evolution of a World-Class Port
6. Innovations in Management Practice
7. Relationship Management – Creating a Relational Framework
Part III: Co-evolution: Theory and Practice
8. Forms of Co-evolution
9. The Political Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution
10. Lessons for Managers Operating in a Complex Environment
Index

Editorial Reviews

Review

‘This work is an excellent example of a joint business-academic collaboration on telling the story of how a major business evolved successfully with its environment – an environment in which most businesses have found it difficult to operate and most researchers have found it a challenge to explain. Through meticulous research, the research team explains with solid facts and strong theory how a business influenced its highly complex and ambiguous political environment through developing strategic relationships. This project is a model for conducting relevant research that the management field desperately needs. It is exemplary of engaged scholarship that merges the best of scholarship and practice. Both academics and executives will find this book a treasure of ideas.’ — Anne Tsui, Arizona State University, US and President, Academy of Management 2012

‘This book gives full due to two areas which were totally under-researched in earlier work, namely how corporate evolution takes place and how it can proceed within a highly politicized as well as institutionalized environment. The Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution is a remarkable statement of facts, a solid perspective on co-evolution – the way the relationships between YICT and its environments evolved together. It is an invaluable source of data on how a new container terminal became, after an initially difficult period, one of the world top-class ports largely through the initiatives of its management.’ — Gustaaf De Monie University of Antwerp, Belgium

‘There are two reasons for recommending this highly readable book. It offers a careful explanation of how interaction between investors, operating firms, local politicians and central administrators shapes the corporate governance of new Chinese multinationals and their contracts in a highly regulated infrastructure industry such as ports. Based on the outcome of the empirical study of China’s largest container terminal, the book further convincingly argues how the interaction between firms and local politicians or central administrators specifies the missing link in co-evolution theory, namely the mechanism by which firms can convert their demand for a better fitting business environment into corresponding institutional policies. In short the book offers both additional insights into the new business system in China (and suggestions for foreign firms how to better cope with such a system), and the process by which good theory gets refined.’ — Barbara Krug, Erasmus University, The Netherlands

‘The dramatic progress of many societies in recent decades has rested – often without full acknowledgement – on the hybridizing of different business systems, and secondly on the flowing together of the resulting blended organizations with their political social and cultural surroundings. This is nowhere better illustrated than in China’s Pearl River Delta where the long heritage of Hong Kong as a western trading outpost meets the longer heritage of China as a state-dominated society. In this book the co-evolution of the world’s largest matrix of transport hubs is analysed in fine detail by another hybrid: that of world class exponents of both organization theory and the practical managing of complexity.’ — Gordon Redding, INSEAD, France

About the Author

John Child, Emeritus Professor of Commerce, University of Birmingham and Professor of Management, University of Plymouth, UK, Kenneth K.-T. Tse, Professor of Practice in Management, CUHK Business School, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and Suzana B. Rodrigues, Emeritus Professor of International Business and Organization, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, The Netherlands and Faculty of Business Administration, Universidade FUMEC, Belo Horizonte, Brazil

View on Amazon

电子书代发PDF格式价格30我要求助
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » The Dynamics of Corporate Co-evolution: A Case Study of Port Development in China