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Catching the chameleon: understanding the elusive term “knowledge”

Rashmi H. Assudani (Will be joining the faculty at Williams College of Business, Xavier University, Cincinnati in Fall 2005. This article was written during her doctoral dissertation at the Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal. Her research interests lie in understanding the issues and challenges associated with the management of knowledge in organizations, especially across dispersed units. Her research has been published, and has been regularly awarded at leading academic and practitioner conferences. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Rashmi H. Assudani (rashmi.assudani@mail.mcgill.ca) at 134, Lookout Farm Drive, Crestview Hills, KY, 41017 (before September 1, 2005) and at Williams College of Business, Department of Management & Entrepreneurship, Xavier University, Cincinnati, OH, 45207 (after September 1, 2005).)

Journal of Knowledge Management

ISSN: 1367-3270

Article publication date: 1 April 2005

3388

Abstract

Purpose

To examine the various discourses on “knowledge” and to understand what knowledge means – is it a process of leveraging resources, is it a resource, or is it both – a process and a resource? Further, the purpose of the paper is to propose a framework for knowledge management.

Design/methodology/approach

The literature on “knowledge” is reviewed and “knowledge” is analyzed along the epistemological dimensions. The synthesis seeks to integrate the disparate ways in which “knowledge” has been conceptualized in the management literature.

Findings

The framework on knowledge management recognizes and establishes linkages between both attributes of knowledge – knowledge as a process and as a resource. It recognizes knowledge as an input resource (“knowledge of”), knowledge as an output resource (“knowledge from”), and knowledge as a process linking the “knowledge of” to the “knowledge from”.

Practical implications

A very useful source for practitioners and students interested in the field of knowledge management.

Originality/value

This paper is among the early works to organize the literature and to clarify the alternative thoughts that exist towards defining knowledge. The framework offers the literature in a very understandable and usable form for all those who are centrally or peripherally related to knowledge management.

Keywords

Citation

Assudani, R.H. (2005), "Catching the chameleon: understanding the elusive term “knowledge”", Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 9 No. 2, pp. 31-44. https://doi.org/10.1108/13673270510590209

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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