Options
Khan, Ashfaq
Loading...
Given Name
Ashfaq
Ashfaq
Surname
Khan
UNE Researcher ID
une-id:akhan27
Email
akhan27@une.edu.au
Preferred Given Name
Ashfaq
School/Department
UNE Business School
2 results
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationMatching Resources with Demand: A Flawed Strategy?(United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, 2013)
; Ahmad, WaqarAn organization's survival depends largely on its capacity to withstand external "reorganizing" attempts. Little research, if any, has so far been undertaken examining the survival of an entire business sector where its constituents undergo an externally dictated change and as a result it runs a risk of a thorough "jolt" or even "demise". The authors present empirical evidence that a business sector may be subjected to "unwanted" re-organizing by its "parent/controlling" entity, and may cease to exist, in its real essence, if its constituents are forced to undergo a change that will alter the very objectives upon which their existence rests. - PublicationLeadership, Business Schools and Financial Crises: The search for a missing linkBusiness schools produce leaders who command 'power' and 'governmentality', as per Foucault's theoretical conceptualisations, to institutionalise routines and social practices in contemporary organisations. These leaders must uphold ethics in their business decisions; however, this has not been reflected in many instances, as recurring financial crises have depicted over time. Efforts to address the issue and reach its root cause have failed to deliver concrete results so far, which necessitates an objective probe into today's business education. This conceptual-cum-analytical paper proposes an alternate, indirect approach to effectively tackle the issue. We suggest two remedies: first, transformative teaching and learning activities that inculcate ethical values into students should be implemented at the grass root level - primary and secondary schools, that feed into business schools with future business leaders; second, a conducive corporate governance environment within business organisations that supports ethical decisions and nurtures ethical behaviour needs to be developed - arguably the first being the prerequisite for the second.