NGOs and international business research: Progress,prospects and problems |
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Authors: | Richard Lambell Gaby Ramia Chris Nyland Marco Michelotti |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Management, Monash University, PO Box 197, Caulfield East, VIC 3145, Australia.;2. Department of Management, Monash University, Wellington Road, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia. |
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Abstract: | Civil society, and non‐government organizations (NGOs) in particular, have become a research interest in international business (IB). The purpose of this paper is to review scholarly understandings of the nature and significance of NGOs in IB. Contributions from complementary research domains are also explored with a view to encouraging greater interdisciplinary integration in analysing the NGO sector and in particular its relations with multinational enterprises (MNEs). These domains are: strategic alliances and resource dependency; global governance and multilateralism; public management; and regulation theory. The primary argument is that such interdisciplinarity may facilitate more innovative IB treatments of the role of NGOs, reflecting more adequately their strategic environment and motivations. Moreover, including a multitude of perspectives helps to address broader issues identified by scholars as pivotal to the future standing of the field: the nature of strategic agency among organizations other than MNEs; the interpretation of globalization and its implications for organizations; and whether IB is too isolated from the other social sciences. |
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