JOURNAL
OF WORLD BUSINESS
Call for papers for a special issue
Submission Deadline: September
1, 2014
Learning and Knowledge
Management In
and Out of Emerging Markets
Guest Editors: Preet S. Aulakh, Sumit K. Kundu,
and Somnath Lahiri
Supervising Editor: Mike Peng
Significant attention has
been devoted in recent years to
understand how MNCs from developed nations enter and compete in
various
emerging markets. A growing body of research has also focused on
how MNCs from
emerging markets internationalize to compete in the global
arena. There is
unanimity amongst scholars that competing within emerging
markets and internationalizing
out of these markets require strategic choices that are markedly
different from
those prescribed in traditional models of MNC behavior (Aulakh
& Kotabe,
2008; Contractor et al., 2007; Hoskisson et al., 2013; Luo &
Tung, 2009; Meyer
et al., 2009). But how MNCs learn and manage knowledge as they
compete in and
out of emerging markets has gained little scrutiny in the
contemporary international
business research (Lahiri, 2011; Peng et al., 2010). The aim of
this JWB special
issue is to foster scholarship that develops new theory and
promotes novel empirical
and practitioner insights on MNC learning and knowledge
management (LKM) strategies
in the context of emerging markets.
The
importance, processes, and
outcomes of LKM have been well documented in the literature.
Organizational
learning theory considers firms as cognitive enterprises.
Although some
overlaps exist between learning and knowledge management, the
former can be
considered a precursor
of the latter. Through
learning, organizations are
able to create, acquire, and transfer knowledge and accordingly
modify their
behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights. Knowledge acquired as a result of
learning allows firms to either reinforce or change
organizational routines. Scholars
have forwarded the notion of learning organizations, wherein
individual-level learning is transferred to the organization
level resulting in
shared mental models. These mental models allow organizations to
update their
beliefs about various cause-effect relationships relating to
themselves, their
markets, and competitors, and devise strategies to adjust and
respond to
internal and external environments. Learning
and consequent knowledge development is facilitated by firms’
experience, both
positive and negative (Chang et al., 2012). Scholars agree that
properly
implemented LKM processes can be a source of competitive
advantage. However,
they also caution that firms can make erroneous strategic
decisions if learning
is based on biased representation of past reality.
To compete
in foreign markets MNCs
need to learn and gather knowledge about the local business
environment
including roles played by various stakeholders, business
partners and
competitors. Dealing with various components of learning
(information
acquisition, information dissemination, shared interpretation,
and development
of organizational memory) and knowledge management can be tricky
as host nations
may present institutional environments that may be ambiguous and
uncertain to
foreign MNCs. Therefore, MNCs may need to frame different LKM
strategies that
fit local contexts and allow them to compete over local rivals
by grafting new
knowledge or engaging in learning and knowledge gathering from
others. Given
that business environments in emerging markets are markedly
different from
those in developed nations, question arises as to how MNCs
engage in LKM as
they compete in and out of emerging markets and whether LKM
processes differ
owing to differences in MNCs’ home market attributes.
This
special issue solicits scholarly
contributions that advance our understanding of LKM strategies
that (a) MNCs
from developed nations deploy to enter and compete within
emerging markets, and
(b) MNCs from emerging markets utilize in their own
internationalization
processes. The following is an illustrative list of questions:
· How do developed nation MNCs
(DMNCs) learn and build
knowledge from their prior entries into emerging markets? What
strategies and
structures do they employ to use existing knowledge to compete
in emerging
markets?
· How do emerging market MNCs (EMNCs)
learn and build
knowledge from their prior internationalization moves out of
their home markets?
What strategies and structures do they employ to use existing
knowledge to
compete in developed markets or other emerging markets (Peng,
2012)?
· How and why LKM strategies of DMNCs
and EMNCs differ? In
addition, how do these strategies differ across manufacturing
and service
sectors (Kundu & Merchant, 2008)?
· Does affiliation with specific
networks or business groups influence
the KLM strategies of firms?
· What role does distance
(institutional, organizational, geographical) (Berry et al.,
2010) play in the
LKM strategies of DMNCs and EMNCs?
· How do DMNCs and EMNCs organize
resources and capabilities (Lahiri
et al., 2012) to efficiently formulate and implement LKM
strategies?
· How do DMNCs and EMNCs institute
policies, structures, and
processes to facilitate LKM (Sun et al., 2012)?
· How do LKM strategies affect global
competitiveness and
performance of DMNCs and EMNCs?
Submission process
Authors should email their
manuscripts in Word (no PDF
please) to all three Guest Editors (and copy Supervising Editor)
with the
subject labeled “Submission to JWB SI: Learning and knowledge
management” by September
1, 2014. Manuscripts should be prepared in accordance with the Guide for Authors
available at
http://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-of-world-business/1090-9516/guide-for-authors.
The
anticipated publication date is 2016. All submitted manuscripts
will be
subjected to JWB’s blind review process.
Submitted
manuscripts may be
conceptual or empirical (quantitative or qualitative). Questions
about the
special issue may be directed at any of the following guest
editors:
-
Preet S. Aulakh, Guest Editor, York University, Canada (email: [log in to unmask])
- Sumit K. Kundu, Guest Editor, Florida International
University, USA (email:
[log in to unmask])
- Somnath Lahiri, Guest Editor, Illinois State University, USA
(email: [log in to unmask])
References
Aulakh,
P.S., & Kotabe, M. (2008). Institutional changes and
organizational
transformation in developing economies. Journal of International
Management,
14(3): 209-216.
Berry, H., Guillén, M.F., & Zhou, N. (2010). An
institutional
approach to cross-national distance. Journal
of International Business Studies, 17: 1-26.
Chang, Y., Gong, Y., & Peng, M.W. (2012). Expatriate
knowledge transfer,
subsidiary absorptive capacity, and subsidiary performance. Academy of Management
Journal, 55(4):
927-948.
Contractor,
F.J.,
Kumar, V., & Kundu, S.K. (2007). Nature of the relationship
between
international expansion and performance: The case of emerging
market firms. Journal of
World Business, 42(4):
401-417.
Hoskisson, R.E., Wright,
M.,
Filatotchev, I., & Peng, M.W. (2013). Emerging
multinationals from
mid-range economies: The influence of institutions and factor
markets. Journal
of Management Studies (In Press).
Kundu, S.K., & Merchant, H. (2008). Service multinationals:
Their past,
present, and future. Management
International
Review, 48: 371-377.
Lahiri, S. (2011). India-focused publications in leading
international
business journals. Asia
Pacific Journal
of Management, 28(2): 427-447.
Lahiri, S., Kedia,
B.L., &
Mukherjee, D. (2012). The impact of management capability on the
firm resource-performance
relationship: Evidence from Indian offshore outsourcing service
providers. Journal of World Business,
47(1):
145-155.
Luo, Y., & Tung, R.L. (2007). International expansion of
emerging market
enterprises: A springboard perspective. Journal
of International Business Studies, 38(4): 481-498.
Meyer, K.E., Estrin, S., Bhaumik, S.K., &
Peng, M.W. (2009). Institutions, resources, and entry strategies
in
emerging economies. Strategic Management Journal, 30(1): 61-80.
Peng, M.W. (2012). The global strategy of emerging multinationals
from
China. Global Strategy
Journal, 2(2):
97-107.
Peng, M.W., Bhagat, R.S., & Chang, S-J. (2010).Asia and
global business.
Journal of International
Business Studies,
41(3): 373-376.
Sun, S.L., Peng, M.W., Ren, B., & Yan, D. (2012). A comparative
ownership advantage framework
for cross-border M&As: The rise
of Chinese and Indian MNEs. Journal
of World Business, 47(1): 4-16.
-- Dr. Sumit K. Kundu Professor James K. Batten Eminent Scholar Chair in International Business Academic Director - Master's in International Business program Department of Management and International Business College of Business Administration Florida International University 345-B Ryder Business Building 11200 SW 8 Street Miami, FL 33199 USA Telephone: (305) 348-3251 Fax: (305) 348-6146 Email: [log in to unmask]