What is it about?
The intention of this article is to put forward the, to date, the unidentified viewpoint that organisational action research and project management have many shared properties – making it a useful exercise to compare and contrast them in relation to organisational management structures and strategies.
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Why is it important?
Project management represents a mainstay strategy for much of the organisational research seen in health care management – and has done for many years. More recently, the exploratory literature on project management has identified many limitations – especially when matched against “traditional” examples. Many health services have witnessed a more recent organisational management drive to seek out alternative strategies that incorporate less hierarchical and more participatory research methods. Action research certainly fits this bill and, on further examination, can be incorporated into a project management ethos and vice versa.
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This page is a summary of: Project management and action research: two sides of the same coin?, Journal of Health Organization and Management, December 2005, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/14777260510629715.
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