ҳ

29 September 2020

A new book “Understanding Deviance in a World of Standards” was released during a research seminar held at Department of Management and Engineering online. The book investigates standards as a global phenomenon that affects most industries and sectors.

 Picture from the Zoom meeting where you see all the participants in the seminar.

Picture on the front of the book The front page of the book "Understanding deviance in a world of standards".

Edited by Andrea Fried, Associate Professor in Business Administration at LiU, “Understanding Deviance in a World of Standards” investigates standards as global phenomenon that affects most industries and sectors.

The book explores the organizational conditions and contradictions under which different types of deviance from standards occur. Case studies of software-developing companies illustrate insightful generalizations on deviations from standards. They provide an explanation of why companies deviated from standards, for example in the case of recent aircraft crashes or violations of environmental standards for car emissions.

– The book is very interesting from many different perspectives. It is also thematically close to my research, says Solmaz Filiz Karabag, Associate Professor in Project, Innovations and Entrepreneurship at LiU, and discussant of the book during the seminar.

She addresses that also individuals and universities sometimes violate the research integrity and commit misconduct during their research activities. Further, she highlights, the book’s perspective that organizational deviance does not only cover manipulation of standards but also the perspective that deviance from standards is also essential for innovation and learning.

A short version of the seminar can be seen in the video below.

"Understanding Deviance in a World of Standards"

Edited by Andrea Fried, published by Oxford University Press

Contributors

Ronny Gey, Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Besma Glaa, Linköping University
Andrea Fried, Linköping University and Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Sarah Langer, Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Diana Karadzhova-Beyer, Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Arvind Singhal, The University of Texas at El Paso
Peter Walgenbach, Friedrich Schiller University Jena

Latest news from LiU

A couple of people sitting at a desk in front of a computer.

How childhood liver tumor cells acquire different features

Researchers have discovered how the so called Wnt signaling pathway can result in tumor cells with different features within a single tumor. Their findings contribute to better classification of these tumors.

En närbild av en man som bär glasögon.

David Engblom wins award for his research on how our brains make us feel ill

David Engblom, Professor of Neurobiology, is awarded the 2026 Onkel Adam Prize for outstanding research at the Faculty of Medicine. He researches the role of the brain in making us feel ill in various medical conditions.

Woman at office.

Biogenic carbon dioxide could become a key resource as biogas expands

During the production and upgrading of biogas, carbon dioxide is released, a greenhouse gas that affects the climate. However, research at ҳ shows that this carbon dioxide has several uses and could become an important resource.