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Wallace Clark Award

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Wallace Clark Award or Wallace Clark Medal is a former management award for Distinguished Contribution to Scientific Management, named after Henry Wallace Clark (1880-1948). The Wallace Clark Award was established in 1949 and was sponsored by the American Management Association (AMA), the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), the Association for Consulting Management Engineers and the Society for the Advancement of Management.[1][2]

The first Wallace Clark Medal was in 1948 awarded in the Swiss Hugo de Haan, who was in those days executive secretary of Comite International de l'Organisation Scientifique (CIOS).[3] This organization was dedicated to the promotion of scientific management worldwide, and was founded in the first International Management Congress at Prague in 1924.[4]

Award winners

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References

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  1. ^ Advanced Management, 1957. p. 30.
  2. ^ Charles M. Merrick, ASME Management Division history, 1886-1980. 1984. p. 161
  3. ^ ASME. Mechanical Engineering, Vol. 77, 1955. p. 841
  4. ^ Morgen Witzel. A History of Management Thought. 2016. p. 122
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Daniel A. Wren. "Implementing the Gantt chart in Europe and Britain: the contributions of Wallace Clark." Journal of Management History 21.3 (2015): 309-327.
  6. ^ ASME. Mechanical Engineering, Vol. 72, 1950, p. 265
  7. ^ Michael C. Wood, John Cunningham Wood (2003). Frank and Lillian Gilbreth: Critical Evaluations in Business and ... p. 175.
  8. ^ Edward Brech, Andrew Thomson, John F. Wilson (2010), Lyndall Urwick, Management Pioneer: A Biography. p. 171
  9. ^ "The Wallace Clark Award, co-sponsored by S.A.M. among several other U.S. Management Societies, was presented to WALTER SCOTT of Australia during the Congress." Source: Advanced Management, 1957. p. 30.
  10. ^ Peter Drucker (2012). The Practice of Management. p. 144
  11. ^ Who was Phil Carroll - Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers, at iise.org. Accessed 07-07-2017
  12. ^ K. S. Basu (1915 - 2000s) was Professor and Director of the Institute of Management Studies, University of Bombay, India.
  13. ^ Pacific Traffic, 1968. p. 48: For his serves as president of KLM Royal Dutch Airlines.
  14. ^ Dwayne Orton (March 6, 1903 — November 22, 1971) wans a Canadian educator and editor.