1st Edition

Complexity and Organisations Researching Practice

Edited By Kiran Chauhan, Chris Mowles Copyright 2025
306 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

306 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

306 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Virtually everyone accepts that workplaces are complex, but there is little insight into how we might engage with complexity more skilfully. If complexity isn’t something that managers can control and leaders cannot harness, then what does a complexity perspective offer? This fourth book in the complexity series describes how taking complexity seriously can inform approaches to understanding... Read more

1 Introduction

Kiran Chauhan and Chris Mowles

Part I Decentring subjectivities

2 Histories of sociality: the challenge of seeing our own eyes

Kiran Chauhan

3 Narrating oneself as another: reflexive autoethnographic inquiry

Sune Bjørn Larsen

4 Diffraction and the mobilisation of cross‑cultural identities in practice research

Sophie Wong

5 Reflexivity and its limitations

Chris Mowles

Part II Exploring practice and its breakdowns

6 Experiential learning, reflexivity and the productive use of doubt

Karina Solsø

7 Process and politics – negotiating the roles of human and non-human actors

Mikkel Haugsted Brahm

8 Compromising in research processes

Helle Therkelsen Stoltz

Part III Good enough endings

9 The politics of endings: dilemmas of making contributions in organisation and management studies

Jannie Rasmussen

10 The ethics of writing about experience: a dialogue

Tobit Emmens, Kiran Chauhan and Chris Mowles

11 In the beginning is already the end

Maj Karin Askeland

12 Concluding notes

Chris Mowles and Kiran Chauhan

Biography

Kiran Chauhan is an organisational consultant at The King’s Fund, a health and care policy think tank in the UK. He is also a visiting lecturer at Hertfordshire Business School, University of Hertfordshire.

Chris Mowles is Professor of Complexity and Management at Hertfordshire Business School, University of Hertfordshire.

“This book provides fascinating and timely insights into alternative forms of management education as pioneered and developed on the University of Hertfordshire’s Doctor of Management programme, which provides a person-centred approach that takes account of the complexity of human interaction and feeling in organisations. The chapters, written by staff and graduates from the programme, remind us of the significance of paying attention to the intersections of subjective, organisational and political levels of experience in the world of work, whilst at the same time, raising important moral questions about the importance of kindness in the life of contemporary organisations that are often beset by the ethos of individualism and competition”. 

Candida Yates, Professor of Culture and Communication, Bournemouth University, UK

“We come into the world as humans, living beings, and we leave the world in the same way. In between, curiously, we spend large spells thinking of ourselves as 'workers', 'managers', 'leaders', 'executives' - categories in which it somehow seems important to deny the humanness not only of ourselves but of others, too. This book shows what 

– and how – we might learn when we scratch the thin veneer of those categories, and does so from a deeply informed, rigorous academic perspective, from a tradition dedicated to taking experience seriously. Therefore it's important for business, for public service, and for all of us who seek to build the capacity to think more humanly about the experience.”

Benjamin Taylor, Chief Executive, the Public Service Transformation Academy, UK

“This book draws on the authors’ outstanding reputation, alongside the long-standing ambition of the University of Hertfordshire’s Doctor of Management programme, to reinstate management inquiry as an applied discipline. It’s a core resource for managers, scholars, methodologists and educators in management education who want to understand management practice through the prism of human complexity. The authors make a compelling case for challenging orthodoxy, and more than that, provide accessible means and methods for engaging critically with the managerialist paradigm through reflexivity and creativity, providing honest accounts of journeying from innovators in this space.”

Hannah Hesselgreaves, Professor in Organisational Learning, Northumbria University, UK