Atlas Unplugged (Delbridge et al 2025) | FT50 JMS

12/12/2025 59 min Temporada 1

Listen "Atlas Unplugged (Delbridge et al 2025) | FT50 JMS"

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English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:14:43Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:28:22German Podcast Starts at 00:40:05ReferenceDelbridge, R., Zietsma, C., Suddaby, R., Chowdhury, R. and Wickert, C. (2025), Atlas Unplugged: Re-Imagining the Premises and Prospects of Capitalism for Business and Society. Journal of Management Studies. https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70047‌‌Youtube Channel⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠Connect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎧📚 — the podcast where journal articles stop whispering from behind paywalls and start talking back to the real world.Tonight, we tune into a very different kind of atlas. Not the one that tells you where to go, but the one that dares to ask why the world is built this way at all. 🌍❓The paper on the table:“Atlas Unplugged: Re-Imagining the Premises and Prospects of Capitalism for Business and Society”by Rick Delbridge, Charlene Zietsma, Roy Suddaby, Rashedur Chowdhury, and Christopher Wickert. ✍️✨Published in the Journal of Management Studies — yes, that prestigious, field-defining, FT50-listed journal that sets the bar for what counts as serious management scholarship. 🏛️⭐Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged imagined a world where heroic individuals carry a selfish, efficient capitalism on their shoulders. This Special Issue does something bolder: it unplugs that atlas. It pulls out the wires, looks at the circuitry, and asks:What if capitalism isn’t a neutral machine of freedom and progress, but a system that can amplify violence, racism, inequality, and environmental crisis? ⚡💥Across this issue, the authors and contributors invite us to listen to voices that classic libertarian narratives mute:Indigenous views of capitalism that foreground land, community, and reciprocity 🪶The ethics of care, where responsibility replaces raw self-interest 🤝Self-determination theory, asking what humans need to truly thrive, not just produce 🧠The logic of marketization, that slippery slope where everything becomes a product with a price tag 🏷️Then they turn the lens again, combining place and intersectionality like two powerful spotlights.Place says: look at the ground under your feet — history, politics, community, geography.Intersectionality says: look at how power cuts through race, class, gender, identity.Together, they map labour markets, global value chains, and access to resources in a way that makes capitalism look less like a natural law, and more like a system that was built — and can be rebuilt. 🧩🔧So in this episode of Revise and Resubmit, we’re not just summarizing a paper. We’re asking:If management studies can reimagine capitalism, what kind of capitalism could exist beyond extraction, beyond domination, beyond the shrug of “that’s just how markets work”? 🤔Huge thanks to the authors Rick Delbridge, Charlene Zietsma, Roy Suddaby, Rashedur Chowdhury, and Christopher Wickert, and to the Society for the Advancement of Management Studies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. for this important contribution in the Journal of Management Studies (FT50). 🙏📖If this kind of deep-dive into top-tier research speaks to you, smash that subscribe button on:🎙️ Spotify — search for “Revise and Resubmit”▶️ YouTube — the channel is “Weekend Researcher”🔊 Also available on Amazon Prime Music and Apple PodcastsNow, as we unplug Ayn Rand’s atlas and start tracing new routes for business and society, here’s the question to sit with:👉 If place and intersectionality became the starting point—not the afterthought—how differently would we design capitalism from the ground up? 💭

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