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Organizational learning as a situated routine-based activity in international settings
Authors:Ayse Saka-Helmhout
Institution:1. School of Business, Rutgers University - Camden, Camden, NJ 08102, United States;2. Department of Management and Global Business, Rutgers Business School, Newark and New Brunswick, 1 Washington Park, Newark, NJ 07102, United States
Abstract:A large body of research has extensively studied the mechanisms behind organizational learning processes. However, there have been few studies of the learning process that explore the influences of history, context, and social meaning in international settings. Rather, the focus within the international management field has been on knowledge transfer. This study adopts a situated routine-based view of organizational learning to highlight the influence of national institutional characteristics on the acquisition and enactment of new knowledge. It is based on in-depth case studies that systematically compare the ways in which Japanese parent company knowledge diffuses to subsidiaries in the UK automotive industry. It concludes that organizational learning within the context of multinational corporations is shaped by actors’ enactment of new practices that are embedded in broader institutional contexts, where the links between knowledge transfer and the reinforcement of or change in routines are important in determining the level at which a subsidiary learns.
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