Rosabeth Moss Kanter (born 1943) is a tenured professor in business at Harvard Business School, where she holds the Ernest L. Year 1943 ( MCMXLIII) was a Common year starting on Friday (the link will display full 1943 calendar of the Gregorian calendar. The meaning of the word professor ( Latin: professor, person who professes to be an expert in some art or science teacher of highest rank) varies Harvard Business School ( HBS) is a renowned Business school in the United States Arbuckle Professorship. During the current 2007-2008 Academic school year, she is teaching a course to MBA students titled Managing Change.
A 1967 Ph. D graduate of the University of Michigan, she has written numerous books on business management techniques, particularly change management. The University of Michigan Ann Arbor ( U of M, U-M, UM or simply Michigan) is a top-ranked Coeducational public research Management (covering theory practice and scope of management and Manager' (covering the people who manage might help clarify and systematise She also has a regular column in the Miami Herald. The Miami Herald is a daily Newspaper owned by The McClatchy Company headquartered in Downtown Miami Florida. She is known for her classic 1977 study of tokenism - how being a minority in a group can affect one's performance due to enhanced visibility and performance pressure. Tokenism refers to a policy or practice of limited inclusion of members of a Minority group usually creating a false appearance of inclusive practices intentional or not Her study of men and women of the corporation also became a classic in critical management studies and bureaucracy analysis. Critical management studies (CMS is a loose but rapidly growing grouping of politically Left wing and theoretically innovative approaches to Management, business Bureaucracy is the structure and set of regulations in place to control activity usually in large organizations and government Kanter was #11 in a 2000s survey of Top 50 Business Intellectuals by citation in several sources. In 2002, the Accenture consulting company compiled a list of the top 50 business intellectuals.