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Message
from the Founding President - Prof. Anne S Tsui
I
was born in China many years ago but I have been away
from China for most of my life. It was in the summer
of 2000 when I had the opportunity to spend a full year
of sabbatical at Peking University. The sabbatical opened
a new chapter in my life. It groomed my scholarly
interest in China. What I found in the years since the
summer of 2000 is that China is a large intellectual puzzle
with not thousands but millions of pieces that have yet
to be put together. No one, not economists, not
sociologists, not psychologists, political scientists,
anthropologists, or journalists, is able to tell the full
story of why China has been able to sustain the 8% annual
productivity gain for the past twenty years, and it is
forging ahead full steam to become the world’s largest
economic power within the next ten to fifteen years.
Yet, this market economy blossomed in the garden of the
communist/socialist ideology. The massive restructuring
of the state sector firms led to millions of displaced
workers yet there is no sign of the feared social unrest.
Life in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou is exciting and
prosperous. Yet, rural reform is progressing at a snail’s
pace. Entrepreneurship is the name of the game but
corruption is still a challenge. The MBA degree
is a hot pursuit as all enterprises strive to adopt professional
management. Yet, there is not a systematic body of management
knowledge to explain how Chinese firms operate and why
some have achieved phenomenal results. How Chinese
companies and the Chinese workforce in aggregate are able
to sustain the 8% productivity gain over the past twenty
years remains an intellectual puzzle that begs for a scholarly
explanation. It is the wish to solve this intellectual
puzzle and to fill this knowledge gap that seeded the
idea for the International Association for Chinese Management
Research.
IACMR
was organized with the aim to promote, facilitate, and
advance the field of Chinese management research by scholars
both inside China and outside. IACMR will be the
bridge that links scholars around the globe with a common
interest. It will provide a forum for the intellectual
exchange, mutual learning, and collective pursuit of questions
about firm behavior and individual behavior within firms
in this rapidly changing landscape. Knowledge generated
will be useful not only to broaden the effective management
of firms in China but also, more importantly, contribute
to the body of management knowledge globally.
Clearly,
management research on and in China is at its infant stage.
Our colleagues in China have both the obligation and the
opportunity to develop this field not only through their
personal involvement in research but also, more importantly,
through the development of the next generation of scholars.
IACMR can be an invaluable resource for our Chinese colleagues
in fulfilling this critical responsibility. It is
my most sincere desire that IACMR will be the instrument
to facilitate and promote international collaboration
in the intellectual development of a field of research
that will add significant value to global knowledge.
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IACMR
is a professional, academic organization to serve scholars,
students, managers, and consultants who are interested in
advancing knowledge about management of organizations
operating in the Chinese context. The primary goal of the
organization is to promote scholarly studies of organization
and management of firms in the Chinese context. An
organizing meeting was held on August 6, 2001, in
Washington, DC attended by about 250 professors of
management and doctoral students from around the world. It
was unanimously voted to form this association. Please see
separate sections for further information and check our
website for updates on the development of this association.
Please
send your ideas or interest to serve the association to
any names listed under "Inquiry/Feedback".
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Scientific
analyses of individual and group behaviors within firms
and firm behaviors in the Chinese context as defined.
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Cross
cultural or comparative analyses of individuals, groups
and organizational level issues of firms inside and
outside the Chinese context.
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Most
importantly, creative methodologies, new theoretical
developments,
and cross-disciplinary analyses of individual, group,
and firm phenomena.
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