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Applying empowerment: organizational model

Applying empowerment: organizational model
Applying empowerment: organizational model
Empowerment is not merely a new buzzword introduced to capture the imagination of current trends in management science. It comprises an innovative approach to working with people and a shift from top‐down management styles which have dominated control mechanism and managerial concepts in both theory and practice since the industrial revolution. This paper suggests a novel typology and analytical framework based on a two dimensional model of organizational contexts of empowerment. These dimensions are belief (in the underlying ideas of empowerment) and fairness (honesty). The model’s four quadrants are labelled as dissociated, enlightened, fraudulent, and miser. It goes on to describe the constituted four prototypes associated with each quadrant. Each quadrant is illustrated by actual or hypothetical cases. All in all, the paper provides a clear depiction of the options organizations are faced with in applying empowerment and their consequences.
1362-0436
82-87
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a

Baruch, Yehuda (1998) Applying empowerment: organizational model. Career Development International, 3 (2), 82-87. (doi:10.1108/13620439810207608).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Empowerment is not merely a new buzzword introduced to capture the imagination of current trends in management science. It comprises an innovative approach to working with people and a shift from top‐down management styles which have dominated control mechanism and managerial concepts in both theory and practice since the industrial revolution. This paper suggests a novel typology and analytical framework based on a two dimensional model of organizational contexts of empowerment. These dimensions are belief (in the underlying ideas of empowerment) and fairness (honesty). The model’s four quadrants are labelled as dissociated, enlightened, fraudulent, and miser. It goes on to describe the constituted four prototypes associated with each quadrant. Each quadrant is illustrated by actual or hypothetical cases. All in all, the paper provides a clear depiction of the options organizations are faced with in applying empowerment and their consequences.

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More information

Published date: 1 April 1998

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487425
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487425
ISSN: 1362-0436
PURE UUID: 9ebb251b-2b1b-4486-b4ef-8c41ffaeefc4
ORCID for Yehuda Baruch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0678-6273

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2024 12:56
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:26

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