by KenwynK.Smith (Author), David N . Berg (Author), Kenwyn K. Smith (Author)
During the past decade, leaders have increasingly relied on self-managing work groups, multifunctional teams, and cross-national executive groups to create the organization of the future. Yet groups are not a panacea for organizational problems; conflicts between individuals or factions within a group often create seemingly contradictory situations paradoxes that can prevent the group from reaching its goals. In this groundbreaking classic, Kenwyn Smith and David Berg offer a revolutionary approach to understanding groups and overcoming the problems that often paralyze group members, the group as a whole, and relations among groups. They explore the hidden dynamics that can prevent a group from functioning effectively. And they show how an apparently paradoxical suggestion - for example, inviting a success oriented group to risk failure, or affirming the benefits of going nowhere to a group focused on moving ahead - can break action barriers, overcome conflicts, and improve group performance. Smith and Berg offer a different way of thinking about groups that will open new avenues of inquiry for professors and students of group behavior, and they propose many innovative ideas that will prove valuable to consultants, trainers, therapists, and others who work with groups on a regular basis.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: 1st Paperback Ed
Publisher: Jossey Bass
Published: 05 Sep 1997
ISBN 10: 078793948X
ISBN 13: 9780787939489
Smith and Berg have provided a new and interesting frame ofreference for the study of behavior in groups that iscomprehensive, often counterintuitive, and interesting. (LeopoldGruenfeld, professor of organizational behavior, New York StateSchool of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Administrative Science Quarterly)
Professionals and academics will find a very intelligent andvaluable examination of many classical theories of personality andgroup interaction. Involving ourselves in the Smith and Berg modelwas, without a doubt, educational and intellectually provocative. (Samuel A. Culbert, Graduate School of Management, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles, and Oscar Ortsman, Departement desSciences Economiques, Humaines et Sociales, Ecole Centrale deParis, Academy of Management Review)
Paradoxes of Group Life is an empowering book ofpossibilities....It is a book that proposes that we think aboutgroups in a different way and that by thinking in that way, we opennumerous possibilities for altering the nature of social systems.It is in illustrating this way of thinking that this book has donea very good job, and it is in the possibilities that stem from thisway of thinking that this book gains a power beyond what itsimmediate subject appears to be. (Jeffrey D. Ford, associateprofessor of management and human resources, Ohio State University, Contemporary Psychology)