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ARTICLES

Reembedding Lean: The Japanese Cultural and Religious Context of a World Changing Management Concept

Pages 95-111 | Published online: 11 Aug 2015
 

Abstract

James Womack, Daniel Jones, and Daniel Roos rhetorically positioned the management concept “lean” for the business world in the early 1990s, claiming that lean would change the world for the better. In this article, I consider the management concept “lean,” its relation to Japanese history, culture, and religious ideas that were salient in Japanese reasoning about management at the time lean was developed. I discuss the embeddedness of lean and relate my findings to the problem of transfer of managerial practices using transfer models developed in a neoinstitutional framework. Contrary to claims by Womack, Jones, and Ross that lean can be studied and implemented without regard to the context, I show how practices and attitudes considered central to lean have a long-standing history in Japan. They can be traced back to the Tokugawa period (1600–1868) and were salient in the trading houses of early modern Japan, in turn heavily inspired by Japanese religious thinking. Research in management fashion suggests that early success case discourse leads to disappointment and abandonment of management concepts later in their life course. Hence, I suggest that the claims of context independence ultimately have led to a declining interest in lean in the business world.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the ISA World Congress in Yokohama, Japan, July 2014, and at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, California, August 2014. The author is indebted to participants for insightful comments that helped shape the paper. Christian Olaf Christiansen, David Strang, and Heather Hofmeister read various versions of the paper and provided valuable and much appreciated feedback. Reviews by guest editor Thomas Janoski and an anonymous reviewer significantly improved the paper, and the author is very grateful for their efforts. All oversights and mistakes remain exclusively the author’s.

Notes

Dutch traders had restricted access through the port of Nagasaki (Jansen Citation2000).

It is beyond the scope of this article to detail the events leading to the Meiji Restoration and the opening of the country, including the impact of foreign military power from the arrival of Commodore Perry’s “Black Ships.” See Gordon (Citation2003); Jansen (Citation2000); Tipton (Citation2008).

The Kojiki is a collection of myths on the origin of Japan. It is the oldest chronicle in Japan, dating from around 711–712.

Lillrank uses the metaphor of low and high electrical current for the process.

This policy was employed at the time of startup, during the formation of the company culture. It no longer applies as a general principle (Lepadatu and Janoski Citation2011).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Christian Wittrock

Christian Wittrock is a PhD fellow in business and social science, Aarhus University, Denmark. His main research interest is the diffusion of management concepts.

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