Management is not a science. There are too many variables for it to be anything other than the exercise of contextual judgement in situations which are understood as well as possible by the protagonists. But the scholarly management community, including researchers, educators, publishers and consultancies, encourages a statistically‐driven research approach more suitable to hard science than a multivariate social science like management. We can, of course, measure very easily whether statistically‐driven research is statistically sound or not. But “statistically sound” does not equate to “good”. We tend to value what we can measure. But in research, like the rest of management practice, we need to learn to measure what we value. This article will be discussing the nature of “good” as applied to research in management, and addressing, as a case example, how a scholarly publisher is reacting to the challenge of promoting good research in management.
Article navigation
1 September 2001
Case Report|
September 01 2001
Looking for good research in management – a publisher’s case study
Keith Howard
Keith Howard
Emerald, Bradford, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6070
Print ISSN: 0025-1747
© MCB UP Limited
2001
Management Decision (2001) 39 (7): 594–598.
Citation
Peters J, Howard K (2001), "Looking for good research in management – a publisher’s case study". Management Decision, Vol. 39 No. 7 pp. 594–598, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000005804
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
On academic writing
European Business Review (November,2006)
How passive voice weakens your scholarly argument
Journal of Management Development (May,2009)
Research without Tears: From the First Ideas to Published Output
The Electronic Library (October,2009)
Scholarly Communication in Science and Engineering Research in Higher Education
Collection Building (September,2005)
Self‐interest and scholarly publication: the dilemma of researchers, reviewers, and editors
International Journal of Educational Management (October,2004)
Related Chapters
Philosophy and Management Research: A Crucial yet Neglected Connection
Delving Deep: Techniques We Wished We Had Known as Emerging Scholars
I Never Promised You a Rose Garden: When Research Questions Ought to Change
Research in Organizational Change and Development
Measuring “West Meets East” in Strategic Management Research Using Cultural Consensus Model and Cultural Mixture Model Analyses
West Meets East: Toward Methodological Exchange
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
