Next to religion, there are few ideas as strongly held or as vigorously defended as those involving chains of command. Many in fact will contend with all seriousness that if they have not been ordained by God, they should have been. And yet “going through channels” is among the most frequently violated of the so‐called “principles” of management. No sooner has the superstructure been set than those caught in it must face the fact that if it is to function successfully they must find ways of circumventing it. This applies to those higher up as well as those down below. It happens both ways. Now, when a principle is violated often enough, it is of course no longer a principle, or even a proverb. Yet try to find a single writer in the field who will advise you to do anything but go through channels, however tortuous that may be (emergencies excepted), and you will get the point.
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1 April 1980
Review Article|
April 01 1980
Chain of Command:What is Happening to It? Available to Purchase
David S. Brown
David S. Brown
Professor of Management School of Government and Business Administration The George Washington University Washington, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1472-5347
Print ISSN: 0143-7739
© MCB UP Limited
1980
Leadership & Organization Development Journal (1980) 1 (4): 23–27.
Citation
Brown DS (1980), "Chain of Command:What is Happening to It?". Leadership & Organization Development Journal, Vol. 1 No. 4 pp. 23–27, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb053472
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