posted on 2018-03-26, 13:15authored byMichelle Lee, Howard Thomas, Lynne Thomas, Alex Wilson
There is reason to be optimistic about management education in Africa given the growth in number of business schools on the continent and continued efforts at raising quality. There remains room for improvement in the field, of course, and the issues and challenges that need to be tackled have been written about elsewhere (e.g. African Management Initiative (AMI), 2013; AMBA, 2015; Thomas et al., 2016). The study reported here has the more nuanced purpose of understanding the blind spots that persist in the field. These are issues that are largely ignored or receive insufficient attention because their significance is underestimated. Through a series of structured in-depth interviews with leading management educators and stakeholders, we uncover three potential blind spots to do with a lack of demand-side orientation, unequal access to management education, and the need for glocalisation.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Business
Published in
African Journal of Management
Citation
LEE, M. ... et al, 2018. Blind spots in African management education: An examination of issues deserving greater attention. African Journal of Management, 4(2), pp. 158-176.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in African Journal of Management on 15 May 2018, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/23322373.2018.1458544.