Decolonising Management. Reflections of a Human Resource Practitioner from the Global South

Patrick Goh
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Abstract

This article takes a slight detour from this edition's theme – decolonising systemic practice – by suggesting that systemic practices can be used to decolonise dominant discourses, such as Western-centric management and its associated form of knowledge production. My views are voiced from an insider–outsider, intersectional positionality – a person from the Global South now working as a Human Resource Practitioner in the United Kingdom. The article posits management and human resource management as Western in their cultural roots and neoliberal in their economic worldview and proposes that underlying assumptions embedded in these discourses have resulted in epistemic othering and subjugation on an international scale. It suggests that decolonising management could begin with making the paradigm shift from a diagnostic to a dialogical understanding of organising human systems. It holds up this epiphany as an example of embracing indigenous knowledge and practices. The article also suggests, through a case story, the use of a systemic practice known as Social GRACEs (Burnham, 1992), that systemic reflexivity and the re-constitution of language games are paramount for making such a paradigmatic shift to decolonised practice.
管理非殖民化。来自全球南部的人力资源从业者的思考
本文稍稍绕开了本期的主题--系统实践的非殖民化--提出系统实践可以用来对主流话语(如以西方为中心的管理及其相关的知识生产形式)进行非殖民化。文章认为,管理和人力资源管理在文化根源上是西方的,在经济世界观上是新自由主义的,并提出这些话语中蕴含的基本假设导致了认识论上的他者化和国际范围内的征服。报告认为,管理的非殖民化可以从组织人类系统的范式转变开始,从诊断性理解转变为对话性理解。文章将这种顿悟作为拥抱本土知识和实践的范例。文章还通过一个案例,使用一种被称为 "社会GRACEs"(Burnham,1992年)的系统实践,表明系统反思性和语言游戏的重新构建对于实现向非殖民化实践的范式转变至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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