“…Fox detected in contemporary management views the influence of the scientific management and human relations schools, ‘along with diverse fragments of so-called “common-sense” and cultural beliefs’ (p. 367). The importance of Fox’s reflections contrasts with the more instrumental contemporary and later social studies of management within nationalised corporations and indeed British industry, which delved little into managerial identity and ideology (for example, McCormick, 1960; Merkle, 1980; Scott et al, 1963). The recognition of the importance of managers’ ideologies, identities and personalities to the behaviour of top management teams, to corporate governance, and to the nature of capitalism has stimulated further recent research interest in this area (Gupta et al, 2019; Mees-Buss and Welch, 2019; Smith et al, 2019).…”