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F04.03P: Panel: Charting Directions for Future Research on MNEs
Time:
Friday, 13/Dec/2024:
4:45pm - 6:00pm
Session Chair: Jacqueline Mees-Buss, University of New South Wales
Location:Otakaari 1, U3
77 people
Panel
Session Abstract
Panelists:
Eleanor Westney (MIT Sloan School of Management)
Ulf Holm (Uppsala University)
Ulf Andersson (Mälardalen University)
Mikael Eriksson (Stockholm School of Economics)
Perttu Kähäri (Aalto University)
Presentations
Charting Directions for Future Research on MNEs
J. Mees-Buss1, E. Westney2, U. Holm3, U. Andersson4, M. Eriksson5, P. Kähäri6, U. Zander5
1University of New South Wales, Australia; 2MIT Sloan School of Management, Schulich School of Business; 3Uppsala University; 4Mälardalen Universuty; 5Stockholm School of Economics; 6Aalto University
Research on large Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) has been at the core of International Management (IM) since the 1980s, with notable contributions from scholars such as Doz, Prahalad, Hedlund, Bartlett and Ghoshal. Their collaborative efforts shaped our understanding of MNEs in the 20th century. But when in the 21st century, globalization, financialization, new technologies, and a changing geopolitical landscape started to transform MNEs, IB researchers were slow to recognize the magnitude and complexity of the changes in MNE organization and the growing diversity among MNEs. Hence, in 2016 a group of IM researchers gathered in Helsinki to re-focus on the evolving nature of MNEs, debating the need for new approaches and examining how environmental and organizational changes affect MNE structure, value creation and managerial tensions.
Our panel seeks to reconvene some of the key contributors to the 2016 debate to assess the continued relevance for future research on MNEs of the issues and themes that we identified eight years ago, and to discuss whether the changes in the global landscape since that time raise new challenges and themes. Our objective is to contribute to the shaping of a highly relevant and interesting research agenda on MNEs for the future.