Marginal organizations : analyzing organizations at the edge of society's mainstream /
By: Tafoya, Dennis W
Material type: BookPublisher: New York City : Palgrave Macmillan, c2014.Description: xiii, 227 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9781137379467Subject(s): Informal sector (Economics)DDC classification: 330 Online resources: Location MapItem type | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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REGULAR | University of Wollongong in Dubai Main Collection | 330 TA MA (Browse shelf) | Available | T0012618 |
, Shelving location: Main Collection Close shelf browser
330 ST PR Principles of economics | 330 ST ST Stanlake's introductory economics / | 330 SW ST Strategic financial management strategic financial management : | 330 TA MA Marginal organizations : | 330 TA PR Principles of economics | 330 TH BR Brilliant economics : | 330 TH DI Diagnostics for a globalized world |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-222) and index.
List of illustrations -- Preface -- Introduction to the concept of the marginal organization -- Profiling the marginal organization : a framework for operational analysis -- The emergence of marginal organizations in a mainstream society : translating influence into strategy in an effort to drive the marginal organization's success -- The emergence of marginals in the active context of mainstream society -- Analyzing the marginals persona : existence as a marginal organization and the marginal's impact on the mainstream -- For marginal organizations within a world of mixed certainty, surviving may be just enough -- Mapping the decline and loss of organizational influence in the marginal economy : a case study -- Conclusions : strategies for the management of a society's marginal organization -- Bibliography -- Index.
On one hand, marginals are complex organizational systems. On the other hand, they are an example of elegant, applied organizational operations. In The Marginal Organization, Tafoya focuses on organizations often described as part of an informal economy, informal sector, underground economy, or unofficial economy. He presents these systems first as organizations and then as organizations operating outside of society's mainstream, as marginal organizations. He outlines a means for studying marginals so that underlying behavioral patterns can be identified, examined and, if needed, addressed.A simple approach to a study of marginal organizations might conclude they exist simply to meet the needs of their stakeholders - they do not. Thinking of marginals as competing in the context of other organizations allows the reader the opportunity to explore new themes, such as when and how marginals may be more inventive and innovative that mainstream organizations, and what one might conclude about illegal marginals like drug pushers and prostitutes. Tafoya's newest contribution to the field of organizational study is not to be missed.