Reputations at stake /
Reputations at Stake provides evidence-based and engaging examples that reveal a compelling story about the phenomenon of reputation.
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
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Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY :
Oxford University Press,
[2023]
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Reputation Matters
- Diagram 1.1: The Rewards and Risks that Reputation Brings to Organizations
- Reputation Forms at Many Levels
- Individual Level
- Team Level
- Organization Level
- Regional Level
- Country Level
- Phenomena Level
- Environment
- Social Movements
- Health
- Technology
- Diagram 1.2: The Multiple Levels of Reputation
- 2. Reputation: What It Means and Where It's Made
- What Is Reputation?
- Table 2.1: Theories and Perspectives of Reputation
- Reputation and Its Fragility
- Table 2.2: Unpacking My Definition of Reputation
- How Multiple Reputations Impact our Lives
- 3. Reputation and Power: How Reputation Is Built, Maintained, and Subject to Threat
- How Did You Decide Who to Vote For?
- Who Are the Electorate Voting For?
- Stakeholder Capitalism and Stakeholder Theory
- Diagram 3.1: An Inside-Out Approach to Stakeholders
- Diagram 3.2: An Outside-In Approach to Stakeholders
- Existential Threats
- Intermediaries
- Diagram 3.3: Past and Present Comparisons of Information, Media Stories, and Reputations
- Diagram 3.4: The Causes, Realities, and Outcomes of Reputation
- 4. How Migration Affects the Reputations of Countries and Cities
- Reputation of Places
- Diagram 4.1: Multiple Reputations that Inform Migration Choices
- Intermediaries Connecting Skilled Migrants With Countries
- Labour Market Reputation
- Return Migration and Brain Circulation
- Diagram 4.2: The Importance of Reputation for Home and Host Countries
- 5. The Global Scale of Reputation and Crisis Management Across Multiple Borders
- Multiple Reputations Across Borders
- Diagram 5.1: The Multiple Reputations of PromCon
- Social Media Reputations: The Dark Side
- Social Influencers and the Spotlight They Shine on Reputations
- Cross-border Crises
- 6. Maintaining Positive Reputations Amid Corruption and Competing Stakeholders
- Navigating Corruption and the Needs of Competing Stakeholders: Lessons from Econet in Zimbabwe and Alacrity in India
- Diagram 6.1: Four Types of Stakeholder Positions to Ethical Behaviour
- Navigating the Needs of Competing Stakeholders: Lessons from Rio Tinto in Madagascar
- Navigating the Needs of Competing Stakeholders: Lessons from Libraries Unlimited
- Diagram 6.2: Location of Fifty-four Libraries of Libraries Unlimited
- Diagram 6.3: Libraries Unlimited Stakeholders
- Table 6.1: Libraries Unlimited Mission and Six Core Purposes
- Table 6.2: Terminology when Formulating a Strategy at Libraries Unlimited
- Diagram 6.4: Five Core Objectives
- Table 6.3: Stakeholder Quotations
- A Summary of Navigating Competing Stakeholders
- 7. Aligning Purpose and Values
- Diagram 7.1: Misalignment of Society, Purpose, and Values
- Purpose
- Diagram 7.2: Excerpt From the Business Roundtable's (2019) Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation