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Letter from the Editor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 July 2019

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Abstract

Type
Letter from the Editor
Copyright
Copyright © The International Association for Chinese Management Research 2019 

With this issue, MOR gives voice to, and signals its strong interest in, attracting qualitative studies. I am extremely pleased and proud of the seven papers featured in this issue and the breadth of coverage that they represent. Recent work based on extensive ethnographic studies have shared insights on complex but important socio-economic and organizational conflict phenomena. For example, the book by Puffer, McCarthy, and Satinsky (Reference Puffer, McCarthy and Satinsky2018), Distinguished Winners of the IACMR-RRBM Award for Responsible Research in Management 2019, is grounded in 150 in-depth interviews of technology professionals who emigrated to the US from former Soviet republics (1970s to 2015), and documents their personal stories and scientific and technological contribution to the economic development of the US, based on a grounding in social science theories of institutions, imprinting, and identity. Julia DiBenigno (Reference DiBenigno2018), also a winner of IACMR-RRBM 2019 Award, describes a 30-month comparative ethnographic field study of four US Army combat brigades and the conflict resolution that arises when professional subunits, with embedded different professional identities, are in conflict, and how this affects brigade achievement of the dual goals of mission-readiness and mental health fitness. These two examples set a high bar for qualitative studies that also address Responsible Research in Management.

I highlight these two examples in order to reinforce MOR's support for and commitment to attract RRBM research and the important contribution that qualitative studies can contribute. To paraphrase the words of the guest editors, the special issue goes beyond highlighting current debates affecting the purpose and conduct of qualitative research and highlights studies of ‘unique phenomena’ arising in transition economies ‘…that can set the building blocks for new or refined context-bound theories, indigenous theories, and contextualized explanations’. I wish to take this opportunity to express my thanks and deep appreciation to the guest editors, Professors Tian Wei (Fudan University), who initiated the idea of the special issue with me, Emmanuella Plakoyiannaki (University of Leeds), and MOR Senior Editor Shameen Prashantham (China Europe International Business School) for their notable developmental editorial guidance and mentoring in bringing this special issue to publication.

MOR has increasingly been successful in attracting papers that engage complex management phenomena or policy issues embedded in the cultural history and institutional logics of transition economies. For example, recent issues have featured the Forum on Tesla and the Global Automotive Industry (September 2018 and March 2019). The forum featured two papers by David Teece and has attracted wide attention (top 25% of all research outputs scored by Altmetric) and many Letters to the Editor (March 2019). The analytical, elegant paper by Papageorgiadis, Xu, and Alexiou, ‘The Effect of European Intellectual Property Institutions on Chinese Outward Foreign Direct Investment’ (March 2019) concludes that Chinese firms’ OFDI show a preference for investment in former Soviet Republics with weaker IP regimes. The study has direct implications for policy makers concerning IP regimes across the EU. I am very encouraged and pleased that MOR increasingly attracts papers that engage complex phenomena and I look forward to seeing papers that go beyond traditional a priori hypotheses testing templates and integrating insights from follow-up exploratory qualitative studies that, for example, unpack sources of unexplained variance such as the high heterogeneity in firm fixed effects variance. Such papers are likely to greatly benefit from the MOR preapproval process.

References

REFERENCES

DiBenigno, J. 2018. Anchored personalization in managing goal conflict between professional groups: The case of US army mental health care. Administrative Science Quarterly, 63(3): 526569.Google Scholar
Papageorgiadis, N., Xu, Y., & Alexiou, C. 2019. The effect of European intellectual property institutions on Chinese outward foreign direct investment. Management and Organization Review, 15(1): 81110.Google Scholar
Puffer, S., McCarthy, D. J., & Satinsky, D. M. 2018. Hammer and silicon: The Soviet diaspora in the US innovation economy – Immigration, innovation, institutions, imprinting, and identity. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rengarajan, S. 2019. Letter to the editor: Complementing the Tesla forum EV discussion with a view upstream. Management and Organization Review, 15(1): 201205.Google Scholar
Teece, D. 2019. China and the reshaping of the auto industry: A dynamic capabilities perspective. Management and Organization Review, 15(1): 177199.Google Scholar
Välikangas, L. 2018. Forum on Tesla and the global automotive industry. Management and Organization Review, 14(3): 467470.Google Scholar