期刊名称:Facta Universitatis. Series Economics and Organization
印刷版ISSN:0354-4699
电子版ISSN:0354-4699
出版年度:2012
卷号:9
期号:1
页码:15-26
出版社:University of Nis
摘要:There is no doubt that the world around us has changed, is changing and will change. The dynamic nature of companies that exist today brings not only advan¬tages but also complex tasks for people who run them. Efficiency in operation of socio-economic system depends to a great extent on the efficiency of its management system. Research in the areas of management and organi¬zation as well as grasping their essence based on interdisciplinary app¬roach¬es, is a prerequisite for efficient manage¬ment at different levels of socio-eco¬nomic systems. Concepts of managing activities in the sphere of business can not be reduced to some recipes, instructions or regulations. They are constantly improving and trans¬forming along with the changes in science, economics and society. In this paper, the authors attempt to develop concepts about the transformation of organizations into a new qualitative state, which is indicated by the term "virtual business system". In fact, recently, in countries with developed market economy, the organizational structure of companies is fundamentally changing and it is primarily associated with a thorough change of work processes in terms of introducing new information and communication technologies. The depth of these radical changes allows us to speak about the beginning of a revolution in the sphere of business which is, by its effects, comparable to the industrial revolution of the 18th and 19th century. The subject of this paper is the attempt to formulate the basic signs of paradigmatic crisis management. It should be noted that sometimes it is inappropriate to equate bureaucracy crisis and crisis management, considering that the bureaucracy was one of the first stages in the development of menagerisation. In this regard, the paper objective is focused on the assertion that there is not internal crisis management, but the demanagerisation of business as a result of systemic, paradigmatic crisis of management.