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An investigation of knowledge transfer practices

Fascia, Michael

Authors



Abstract

This study seeks to understand knowledge transfer practices within the Muslim business community in Edinburgh. It investigates how knowledge transfer practices are managed on a day to day basis, examines the route of development and justification for these
practices into meaningful knowledge transfer processes, and explores the underlying perspective of knowledge from the knowledge transfer practitioners view of knowledge transfer practices in a business context. In particular, the study seeks explanations for
such practices with reference to both a knowledge-based and a resource-based view of the firm.
Due to the multifarious phenomena of knowledge transfer, and to allow a scope necessary to establish epistemological and empirical evidence from literature, a two stage literature review process was adopted. The majority of literature expounds an argument in which
knowledge and knowledge transfer processes in a business context are embedded within a set of real world dimensions, based on causal relationships. Literature determines that it is overcoming difficulties with this framework which is critical for a businesses ability to manage, utilise and extract value from multiple internal and external sources of knowledge. Four broad themes were identified, from which most literature supported this argument: Psychological, Organisational, Philosophical and Cultural.

Book Type Scholarly Edition
Publication Date Mar 29, 2018
Deposit Date Mar 26, 2019
Publisher LAP Lambert Academic Press
ISBN 9786139582747
Keywords Knowledge transfer, Muslim business community,
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/1627897