Over many decades, the Science of Management (Government of people and organizations ) was developed almost exclusively by British (Babbage, Carnegie or Marshall ), Americans (Argyris , Chandler or Michael Porter), German (Rathenau, Weber, etc.) or Japanese authors (Toyoda or Gulick). In the 1980s, a group of Spanish authors began to develop a Management corpus. Their contributions have exceeded the Spanish frontiers and are valued in many other countries. In the book Grandes creadores en la historia del Management, professor José Luis García Ruiz, from Universidad Complutense de Madrid, highlighted 15 important Spanish authors. Later, Francisco Alcaide (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) published ', a classic reference book on the subject. Important authors mentioned in literature include José Aguilar, Jose Manuel Casado, Nuria Chinchilla, Luis Huete, Marcos Urarte or Javier Fernández Aguado. Both Garcia Ruiz and Alcaide described Javier Fernández Aguado as the pioneer of this group of thinkers, defined by some experts as the Spanish School of Management. For example, Javier Andreu (Universidad Nacional a Distancia - UNED), in his book ' or Antonio Pamos in his book En clave de Talento. In 2010, a symposium was held in Madrid to analyze his thinking. It was attended by 600 professionals from twelve countries in Europe and America. A few months later, the papers were published in a book.
|