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Dive into the research topics where Lidija Polutnik is active.

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Featured researches published by Lidija Polutnik.


Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change | 2009

Structural limits of capacity and implications for visibility

Ted Watts; Carol J McNair; Vicki Baard; Lidija Polutnik

Purpose – Two reasons are identified for studying the impact of capacity measurements on organizations. First, firms which make the best use of their resources can be expected to outperform their competitors. The second arises from the potential structuration effect of capacity metrics. Such an investigation makes capacity a visible, and hence an actionable, construct. This paper aims to address these issues.Design/methodology/approach – To explore these issues, a combination of analytics and qualitative field research methodology was used. The measurement dimensions were developed by analyzing the different reports, baseline measures, and metrics included in the various capacity models as suggested by the literature. These analytics were enriched with observations obtained from field research.Findings – Maximizing the value created within an organization starts with understanding the nature and capability of all the companys resources. The outcome is the identification of capacity systems specifically s...


Archive | 2003

SHIFTING PERSPECTIVES: ACCOUNTING, VISIBILITY, AND MANAGEMENT ACTION

Carol J McNair; Lidija Polutnik; Holly H Johnston; Jason Augustyn; Charles R. Thomas

The objective of the research, and paper, is to determine first whether or not the accounting abstraction appears to dominate the manager’s perceptions of the physical reality of the firm’s utilization of its physical assets, and second, whether changes in the accounting abstraction (e.g. the addition of Capacity cost management reports and measurements) lead to changes in how managers perceive, and use, their physical assets. Using a cognitive decision-making structure developed by Wagenaar et al. (1995), this study explores the interplay between the structure and nature of capacity reporting (the surface structure of the decision) and the subsequent analysis and choice of managers within the firm (the deep structure of the decision). A five-site field research methodology was used to gather data from companies across a multitude of industry contexts and situations. Results suggest that the nature of capacity measurement and reporting does shape manager’s perceptions of current and potential future performance (the cognitive surface structure), with major implications for the nature and type of decisions and trade-offs made (the deep structure). Specifically, managers appear to make decisions that are illogical when considered in light of the physical reality of their operations based on the representations of this reality (e.g. the capacity measures and reports). Analysis and interpretation of these results suggest that what accounting makes visible appears to drive decision-making and performance in organization.


International Journal of Critical Accounting | 2010

Improving productive potential in the airline industry by exploring the productive limits of capacity

Carol J McNair; Ted Watts; Vicki Baard; Lidija Polutnik

This paper fills the gap between defining and measuring the productive limits of a service or system and the impact of various assumptions about the productive potential of the nature and informativeness of capacity cost management systems for the service industry. The focus rests on the various ways in which multidimensional limits (for example, time, space, volume and/or value-creating ability) can be used to define productive capacity. This research suggests that the limits used in establishing the capacity cost management system restricts the amount and nature of the information the system is capable of providing to management. The methodology used was a combination of analytics and qualitative field research. The outcome is the identification of capacity systems specifically suited for service operations. Such a framework allows the organisation to develop economies, make visible the drivers of waste and productivity and to identify the primary assumptions and implications of capacity limits.


Industrial Relations Journal | 2003

Women managers in Poland and the United States: a comparative analysis

Richard T. Bliss; Lidija Polutnik

This paper compares women managers in Poland and the United States in the context of their contrasting political and economic systems - the socialism of Central and Eastern Europe and the liberal democratic tradition of the West. We discuss the two political philosophies and their impact on gender roles and labour markets, and then compare this theory to the reality of Polands transition. Finally, this background is used to analyse differences between Polish women managers and their American counterparts.


Archive | 2017

Ambidextrous IT Governance in the Public Sector: A Revelatory Case Study of the Swedish Tax Authorities

Johan Magnusson; Jacob Torell; Lidija Polutnik; Urban Ask

Contemporary organizations are increasingly turning their attention towards utilizing information technology not solely for achieving efficiency gains but also for attaining innovation. The literature suggests that the trade-off between efficiency and innovation may be avoided through adopting what is referred to as organizational ambidexterity. Using a revelatory case study of the Swedish tax authorities informed by organizational ambidexterity, we develop an understanding of how the strive for ambidexterity is effectuated through IT Governance. Our research shows that despite the best intentions of the organization in stipulating ambidextrous IT Governance, the implementation of said governance invariantly becomes laden with trade-offs. In addition to providing insights about the relatively novel phenomenon of Ambidextrous IT Governance, the study contributes to the literature on organizational ambidexterity with an empirical investigation into the difficulties associated with achieving ambidexterity within the public sector.


Archive | 2006

No-name money

Maria Minniti; Lidija Polutnik

Contributors Preface and Acknowledgement 1. A Zeal for the Truth 2. The Yeager Mystique: A Profile of the Scholar as Teacher and Colleague 3. The Virginia Renaissance in Political Economy: The 1960s Revisited 4. Leland, A Personal Appreciation 5. Monopoly Politics and Its Unsurprising Effects 6. Good Ideas and Bad Regressions: The Sad State of Empirical Work in Public Choice 7. Pluralism, Formalism and American Economics 8. Lelands Favourite Economists 9. The Genesis of an Idea: Classical Economics and the Birth of Monetary Disequilibrium Theory 10. The Macroeconomics of Money, Saving, and Investment 11. No-Name Money 12. Monetary Disequilibrium Theory and Austrian Macroeconomics: Further Thoughts on a Synthesis 13. Reflections on Reswitching and Roundaboutness 14. Leland Yeagers Utilitarianism as a Guide to Public Policy 15. Ethnic Conflict and the Economics of Social Cooperation: Reflections on a Difficult Problem 16. The Legacy of Bismarck


European Accounting Review | 2001

Cost Management and Value Creation: The Missing Link

Carol J. McNair; Lidija Polutnik; Riccardo Silvi


Journal of cost management | 2006

Using the balanced scorecard methodology to execute China strategy

Carol J McNair; Lidija Polutnik; Riccardo Silvi


Journal of Corporate Accounting & Finance | 2001

Customer value: A new kind of cost management

Carol J. McNair; Lidija Polutnik; Riccardo Silvi


Comparative Economic Studies | 1999

Financial Development and Small Firms Financing in Slovenia

Maria Minniti; Lidija Polutnik

Collaboration


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Carol J McNair

United States Coast Guard Academy

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Ted Watts

University of Wollongong

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Vicki Baard

University of Wollongong

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Urban Ask

University of Gothenburg

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