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Careers and Organisations: A Figure–Ground Problem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Kerr Inkson*
Affiliation:
Department of Management and International Business, Albany Campus, Massey University, Private Bag 102 904, North Shore MSC Auckland, Email: [email protected], Phone: +64 (9) 414 0800 ext. 9240

Abstract

This paper argues that people's careers have great personal significance for them and energise much organisational activity, but that in the context of organisations and management they often appear irrelevant. Contrasting career metaphors are used to show how careers develop through tensions between organisational and social structure, and individual agency. The findings of a New Zealand research study show how new flexibilities and ambiguities in economic and organisation structures result in people developing careers which, like the Australasian “Big O.E.” institution, are mobile, improvisational, and learning-based. A reflexive model is used to show how careers can create organisations as well as vice versa. The implications of new career theories for workers, managers and management educators are indicated. Greater appreciation of career dynamics results in the subversion of some traditional management ideas and the development of new models of self- and organisational management.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2004

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