
Passionately Transforming Management with Crime
Alf Rehn(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 4. February 2027
Book
Hardback
192 pages
978-1-350-59365-7 (ISBN)
Description
The allure of crime is undeniable. From news headlines to true crime podcasts, crime has a way of entrapping our interest and imagination. An exploration of the lessons that managers can learn from organised crime, Passionately Transforming Management with Crime addresses how criminal enterprises engage with leadership and innovation, and how popular representations of crime affect our perceptions of management and organisation.
Alf Rehn's enticing text explores crime from a number of angles - historical, cultural and economic - to better understand the link between business and crime, and the lessons that can be shared. It looks to crime both as a source of inspiration for entrepreneurship and organisation, and as an influence on management through iconographies, legends and storytelling. The book also debunks common misconceptions about the business of crime, and touches on the dangers of romanticising criminal endeavours.
Following an examination of criminals in history and fiction, Passionately Transforming Management with Crime progresses to discuss why we are attracted to crime, how crime mirrors legitimate businesses, and what we can learn from the criminal underworld, both real and fictional.
Passionately Transforming Management with Crime offers a compelling and novel approach to management that provides valuable insights for practicing managers, professionals, advanced postgraduate students and scholars in Management, Critical Management Studies and Organisation Studies.
Witty and engaging, this text is a fascinating read for those interested in discovering the management lessons to be learnt from Jean Genet, Biggie Smalls and Grand Theft Auto.
Alf Rehn's enticing text explores crime from a number of angles - historical, cultural and economic - to better understand the link between business and crime, and the lessons that can be shared. It looks to crime both as a source of inspiration for entrepreneurship and organisation, and as an influence on management through iconographies, legends and storytelling. The book also debunks common misconceptions about the business of crime, and touches on the dangers of romanticising criminal endeavours.
Following an examination of criminals in history and fiction, Passionately Transforming Management with Crime progresses to discuss why we are attracted to crime, how crime mirrors legitimate businesses, and what we can learn from the criminal underworld, both real and fictional.
Passionately Transforming Management with Crime offers a compelling and novel approach to management that provides valuable insights for practicing managers, professionals, advanced postgraduate students and scholars in Management, Critical Management Studies and Organisation Studies.
Witty and engaging, this text is a fascinating read for those interested in discovering the management lessons to be learnt from Jean Genet, Biggie Smalls and Grand Theft Auto.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-350-59365-7 (9781350593657)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Alf Rehn is Professor of Innovation, Design, and Management at the University of Southern Denmark, where he also serves as director of CODES - the Center for Organizational Datafication and its Ethics in Society. His research sits at the intersection of critical management studies, organizational theory, and cultural analysis, with a particular focus on the hidden and often transgressive dimensions of managerial practice. Rehn has published widely on topics such as power, creativity, organizational ethics, and the performativity of management discourse.
Content
1. Intro: Mack the Knife
2. Crime as Primitive (Economy)
3. Crime as Business Unfettered
4. Crime as (Economic) Funhouse
5. Crime as Business Foretold
6. The Ten Crack Commandments
2. Crime as Primitive (Economy)
3. Crime as Business Unfettered
4. Crime as (Economic) Funhouse
5. Crime as Business Foretold
6. The Ten Crack Commandments