Abstract
WITH reference to a report of the committee appointed by the President of the Board of Trade under the chairmanship of Sir Clive Baillieu entitled “A Central Institute of Management”1, it appears that the content of management under the proposed Institute of Management will cover the “common, broad functions of management” and will embody both “research” and “training and education”. It is assumed that these will embrace the general principles of management or administration, such for example as the principle of delegation of authority, since they are current throughout all administrative or managerial fields.
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Nature, 157, 601 (1946).
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WELLS, P. Central Institute of Management. Nature 158, 381 (1946). https://doi.org/10.1038/158381b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/158381b0
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