Acknowledging the claims of stakeholders is part of the new lexicon of higher education management. Institutions, through mission statements, now explicitly recognise their obligation to meet the needs of a range of stakeholders such as students, employers, professional associations, the government, the academic community, and wider society. However, while it is easy to list stakeholders, and promise to safeguard their various interests at the institutional level, significant conflicts can arise in managing their competing claims. Previously, stakeholder mapping has focused attention at the institutional level although the practical responsibility for managing these relationships often occurs at the micro or programme level. Drawing on interviews with programme leaders and lecturers involved in single company management education programmes, this paper explores lecturer understandings of stakeholder interests and relates these findings to different conceptions of quality. It is argued that such programmes face particular challenges in managing multiple, and often conflicting, stakeholder interests and expectations.
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1 June 1999
Research Article|
June 01 1999
Stakeholder conceptions of quality in single company management education Available to Purchase
Bruce Macfarlane;
Bruce Macfarlane
Principal Lecturer in the Business School, Canterbury Christ Church University College, Canterbury, UK
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Laurie Lomas
Laurie Lomas
Principal Lecturer in the Business School, Canterbury Christ Church University College, Canterbury, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7662
Print ISSN: 0968-4883
© MCB UP Limited
1999
Quality Assurance in Education (1999) 7 (2): 77–84.
Citation
Macfarlane B, Lomas L (1999), "Stakeholder conceptions of quality in single company management education". Quality Assurance in Education, Vol. 7 No. 2 pp. 77–84, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09684889910269560
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