传教士、雇佣兵还是汽车销售员?马来西亚的MBA教学

Missionaries, Mercenaries Or Car Salesmen? MBA Teaching In Malaysia*

JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES · 2000
被引 79
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

基于作者在马来西亚教授高管MBA课程的经历,从消费视角分析西方管理思想如何通过MBA教育在海外传播,揭示其中的权力动态与矛盾。

Abstract

Increasing academic attention is being given to the role of management gurus, consultants, managers and academic researchers in the international diffusion of Western management ideas. This is part of wider debates on knowledge, power and globalization. Relatively little attention has been paid to the mechanisms through which diffusion takes place and, in particular, the role of academics as lecturers and business schools as disseminators of management knowledge at home and abroad. This paper draws on the authors’ personal experiences and perceptions of teaching on an Executive MBA programme in Malaysia and those of their students. Management education is growing rapidly in many regions of the world and has become highly commodified and commercialized, with Western universities competing in emerging markets for potentially lucrative local opportunities and foreign students or ‘consumers’. Accordingly, the process of diffusion of Western management ideas is examined through a consumption perspective which treats the foreign MBA as a standardized commodity (much like the foreign car) with particular use, symbolic and exchange values. However, the limits of the consumption perspective in terms of both consumer sovereignty and subordination are also established in revealing deeper and more dynamic relations of power. Moreover, it is argued that while there are parallels with domestic consumption of MBAs, the teaching of MBAs in Malaysia generates added ambivalence among learners founded on global–local and development–imperialism dynamics and tensions.

管理学教育全球化知识传播消费社会学