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Chapter 23—Communicative Constitution of Organizations
After being retooled by Katherine Cooper for this edition, the chapter’s treatment of CCO reads quite different this time around. She has streamlined the theoretical material by removing some of the nuances that will likely improve readability for students. The place you will probably notice the most change is the chapter-wide examples. In the 10th edition, they were primarily drawn from Greek life organizations found on many American campuses. While she has retained some of those notes, she has included (and foregrounded) examples from Habitat for Humanity to show CCO at work in the nonprofit sector. Beyond these changes, much of the theoretical content remains the same.
You can access Changes for a particular chapter in several ways:
Resources
by Type
Instructors can get
additional resources.
Read more
New to Theory
Resources?
Find out more
in this short
video overview
(3:01).
From the Instructors Manual, with additional notes from the authors
List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details
Chapter 23—Communicative Constitution of Organizations
After being retooled by Katherine Cooper for this edition, the chapter’s treatment of CCO reads quite different this time around. She has streamlined the theoretical material by removing some of the nuances that will likely improve readability for students. The place you will probably notice the most change is the chapter-wide examples. In the 10th edition, they were primarily drawn from Greek life organizations found on many American campuses. While she has retained some of those notes, she has included (and foregrounded) examples from Habitat for Humanity to show CCO at work in the nonprofit sector. Beyond these changes, much of the theoretical content remains the same.
You can access Changes for a particular chapter in several ways:
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