Saturday, 6 June 2026

A collection of blog notes on literature review: for MBA students

 A collection of blog notes on literature review: for MBA students


An example of theory-decomposing on the Technology Acceptance Model

A note on study materials to use for the literature review task: for MBA students

A note on the MBA dissertation project literature review tasks of comparison, synthesis and framework-building: on staff reduction

A note of using additional theories to enrich the MBA literature review task: on Gutman's means-end chain theory

A note on some methods used for studying academic articles and books with regard to the literature review task: for MBA students

A note of theory-decomposing on the normative stakeholder theory: for Housing Studies students

A note of theory-decomposing on the normative stakeholder theory: for Housing Studies students


Highlight 6 basic ideas of the normative stakeholder theory and describe two claims of this theory in terms of Toulmin's model of argument; the context of this discussion is "doing a Housing Studies dissertation project, notably on the discussion of research findings".

Great question — normative stakeholder theory is a rich framework to use when discussing findings in a Housing Studies dissertation. Let’s break it down clearly and then apply Toulmin’s model of argument to two claims.

🏠 Six Basic Ideas of Normative Stakeholder Theory

·        Stakeholder rights: Stakeholders have intrinsic rights to be considered in organizational decisions, not just instrumental value.

·        Moral obligation: Organizations have ethical duties toward stakeholders, beyond profit maximization.

·        Fair treatment: All stakeholders deserve equitable consideration, regardless of their economic power.

·        Community embeddedness: Organizations exist within communities and must respect social and environmental contexts.

·        Mutual benefit: Decisions should aim for outcomes that benefit multiple stakeholders, not just shareholders.

·        Long-term sustainability: Ethical stakeholder engagement supports enduring organizational legitimacy and social trust.

📚 Two Claims in Toulmin’s Model of Argument

Claim 1: Housing policy should prioritize tenant voices

·        Claim: Tenant perspectives must be central in housing policy decisions.

·        Grounds (Evidence): Research findings show tenants are disproportionately affected by affordability crises and poor housing conditions.

·        Warrant: Those most impacted by housing policies have a moral right to shape them.

·        Backing: Normative stakeholder theory emphasizes moral obligations to stakeholders, not just economic actors.

·        Qualifier: Tenant voices should be prioritized, though balanced with other stakeholders.

·        Rebuttal: Developers may argue that tenant input slows projects, but ethical legitimacy outweighs efficiency concerns.

Claim 2: Housing development must consider community sustainability

·        Claim: Housing projects should integrate community sustainability goals.

·        Grounds (Evidence): Findings indicate that developments ignoring local needs lead to social fragmentation and resistance.

·        Warrant: Communities are legitimate stakeholders with rights to fair treatment and long-term well-being.

·        Backing: Normative stakeholder theory stresses community embeddedness and mutual benefit.

·        Qualifier: Sustainability should guide development, though compromises may be necessary.

·        Rebuttal: Some argue sustainability raises costs, but long-term trust and legitimacy reduce conflict and improve outcomes.

In your dissertation discussion, you could use these claims to show how normative stakeholder theory frames housing research findings not just as technical data, but as ethical imperatives. This strengthens the argument that housing studies must engage with justice, fairness, and sustainability.

 

Provide 3 academic references on this topic in Harvard reference format.

Here are three solid academic references in Harvard format that you can use to ground your Housing Studies dissertation discussion in normative stakeholder theory. They provide both foundational and critical perspectives.

📖 Academic References (Harvard Style)

·       

Hendry, J. (2001) ‘Missing the target: Normative stakeholder theory and the corporate governance debate’, Business Ethics Quarterly, 11(1), pp. 159–176.

·       

Reed, D. (1999) ‘Stakeholder management theory: A critical theory perspective’, Business Ethics Quarterly, 9(3), pp. 453–483.

·       

Sferrazzo, R., Nigri, G. and Ruffini, R. (2025) ‘Rethinking the normative foundations of the stakeholder theory through the civil economy approach: Insights from a relationality-based anthropological perspective’, Business Ethics, the Environment & Responsibility Ethics, the Environment & Responsibility, 34(2), pp. 206–223.

🏠 How These Fit Your Dissertation Context

·        Hendry (2001): Useful for framing the ethical debate between shareholder vs stakeholder approaches in housing governance.

·        Reed (1999): Offers a critical theory lens, which can help you analyze housing policies in terms of legitimacy and fairness.

·        Sferrazzo et al. (2025): Brings in relationality and civil economy ideas, relevant for community sustainability in housing studies.

 



A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

A note of theory-decomposing on the normative stakeholder theory: for MBA students

A note of theory-decomposing on the normative stakeholder theory: for MBA students

 

Highlight 6 basic ideas of the normative stakeholder theory and describe two claims of this theory in terms of Toulmin's model of argument; the context of this discussion is "doing an MBA dissertation project, notably on the discussion of research findings".

 

I’ll highlight the 6 basic ideas of normative stakeholder theory and then apply Toulmin’s model of argument to two of its key claims, tailored for your MBA dissertation discussion of research findings.


6 Basic Ideas of Normative Stakeholder Theory

Normative stakeholder theory is grounded in moral and ethical principles rather than strategic or instrumental motives. According to Donaldson & Preston (1995) and the normative approach literature:

#

Basic Idea

Core Explanation

1

Stakeholders have intrinsic worth

Stakeholder interests matter morally, independent of their instrumental value to the corporation 

2

Moral obligations to stakeholders

Managers ought to pay attention to key stakeholder relationships based on morals and normative commitments 

3

Ethics at the centre of management

Ethical values should be central to corporate purpose, not subordinate to shareholder value maximisation 

4

Service to all primary stakeholders

Managers should serve employees, customers, suppliers, communities, AND shareholders—not just shareholders 

5

Fundamental moral principles guide decisions

Firms establish moral principles that guide how they treat stakeholders and make business decisions 

6

** stakeholder interests form strategy's foundation**

Stakeholder interests represent what the company is and what it thinks important; strategy should be shaped around moral obligations 


Two Claims of Normative Stakeholder Theory Analysed via Toulmin's Model

Toulmin's model contains six components: ClaimData/GroundsWarrantBackingRebuttal/Reservation, and Qualification.

Claim 1: "Managers ought to serve all primary stakeholders, not just shareholders"

Toulmin Component

Content

Claim

Managers should serve the interests of all primary stakeholders (employees, customers, suppliers, communities, shareholders) 

Data/Grounds

Company decisions affect stakeholder outcomes; decisions made without considering impact on others are usually unethical 

Warrant

Ethics deals with obligations that arise when a corporate agent's decisions affect others, regardless of what constitutes an ethical decision 

Backing

Kantian posture, feminist perspective, and fair contracts approach provide moral principles forming the normative foundation 

Rebuttal

Counter-argument: businesses should maximise shareholder value; ethics is subordinate to profit maximisation 

Qualification

This applies to primary stakeholders whose interests are intrinsically worth protecting, not merely strategically useful 

Claim 2: "Stakeholder claims cannot be ignored simply because honoring them is strategically inconvenient"

Toulmin Component

Content

Claim

Certain stakeholder claims are based on fundamental moral principles and cannot be abridged simply because honoring them doesn't serve strategic interests 

Data/Grounds

Stakeholder interests have intrinsic worth; claims are unrelated to instrumental value of stakeholders for a corporation 

Warrant

Claims independent of corporate strategic considerations should be addressed prior to strategic planning 

Backing

Strategically applied moral commitments are not really moral and cannot cause desired strategic outcomes (Jones, 1995) 

Rebuttal

Counter-argument: firms should only act morally when advantageous; reputation can be pursued directly without moral philosophy 

Qualification

This holds when stakeholder interests form the foundation of corporate strategy itself, representing core company values 


For Your MBA Dissertation: Discussion of Research Findings

When discussing your research findings, you can use Toulmin's model to:

·        Structure argument evaluation: Assess whether your findings support or challenge these normative claims

·        Identify warrants/backing: Examine what moral principles underpin your stakeholders' arguments

·        Address rebuttals: Explicitly acknowledge counterarguments in your discussion section

This analytical framework helps demonstrate critical engagement with theoretical perspectives—a key MBA dissertation requirement.

 

Please provide 5 references on this topic in Harvard reference format.

Here are 5 key references on normative stakeholder theory in Harvard reference format:


1.    Donaldson, T. and Preston, L.E. (1995) 'The stakeholder theory of the corporation: Concepts, evidence, and implications', Academy of Management Review, 20(1), pp. 65–91.

2.    Freeman, R.E. (1984) Strategic management: A stakeholder approach. Boston: Pitman.

3.    Jones, T.M. (1995) 'Instrumental stakeholder theory: A synthesis of ethics and economics', Academy of Management Review, 20(2), pp. 404–438.

4.    Phillips, R., Freeman, R.E. and Wicks, A.C. (2003) 'What stakeholder theory is not', Organization Science, 14(5), pp. 478–506.

5.    Wicks, A.C. and Freeman, R.E. (1998) 'Stakeholder theory and the corporate objective revisited', in Stakeholder theory: The state of the art. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 163–170.


These are foundational and highly cited works that will strengthen your MBA dissertation's theoretical framework and discussion of research findings.




A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

A note on 5 methods to conduct the discussion for writing a Housing Studies dissertation report chapter 5

A note on 5 methods to conduct the discussion for writing a Housing Studies dissertation report chapter 5


I am a part-time Housing Studies student, now in the process of writing up my dissertation report. Regarding chapter 5 (discussion of findings), I am interested to following the following methods to conduct some of the research findings from chapter 4 (presentations of research findings): 

1. triangulation on research methods findings 

2. discussion of research findings by identifying and using some causal mechanisms (re: the real layer of critical realism) 

3. theory-driven analysis on research findings using some academic theories reviewed in chapter 2 (literature review) 

4. discussion of research objectives-related argument claims in terms of Toulmin's model of argument

5. discussion of findings with regard to normative stakeholder theory


Please provide some how-to advices to make use of these 5 methods for this chapter 5-related task. It would be useful to give brief illustrations with reference to the Housing Studies discussion topic of "A pragmatic examination of the housing affordability hardship facing the Hong Kong middle-class families using the mixed methods research approach".

I'll provide practical how-to advice for each of your 5 methods for Chapter 5, with illustrations tailored to your housing affordability topic. Let me structure this comprehensively:

How-to Guide for Chapter 5: Discussion of Findings

1. Triangulation on Research Methods Findings

How-to steps:

·        Compare and contrast findings from your quantitative (survey) and qualitative (interviews/focus groups) methods

·        Identify convergence (where methods agree), complementarity (where they fill each gaps), and discrepancy (where they contradict)

·        Use a triangulation matrix to systematically map findings across methods

·        Explain why discrepancies exist (e.g., different sample characteristics, measurement issues)

Illustration for your topic:

Finding Aspect

Survey Results (Quantitative)

Interview Results (Qualitative)

Triangulation Assessment

Housing cost burden

68% of middle-class spend >40% income on housing 

Families describe "constant stress" about rent hikes, cutting essentials

Convergence: Both confirm severe affordability hardship 

Cause of hardship

Strong correlation: income growth lagged behind rent inflation (r=0.72)

Parents cite "lack of affordable family units" and "government policy failure"

Complementarity: Quant shows magnitude; qual reveals perceived systemic causes 

Impact on children

45% report delaying children' education due to housing costs

Interviews reveal parents "working extra jobs instead of陪伴 children"

Convergence with depth: Both confirm child impact; qual adds emotional dimension

Writing tip: Frame triangulation as strengthening validity: "The convergence between survey statistics and interview narratives strengthens confidence that housing affordability hardship is genuinely severe among HK middle-class families."


2. Discussion Using Causal Mechanisms (Critical Realism's "Real" Layer)

How-to steps:

·        Move beyond empirical layer (what you observed: e.g., families paying 50% income on rent) to identify causal mechanisms at the real layer

·        Use retroduction: Ask "What must be true for this housing hardship to occur?"

·        Identify generative mechanisms: underlying structures that produce the observed events

·        Connect mechanisms to your pragmatist philosophy: mechanisms are real if they have instrumental explanatory value

Illustration for your topic:

text

Empirical Layer (Chapter 4 findings):

• Middle-class families spend 40-60% income on housing

• 52% report housing affordability as "major hardship"

 

↓ (retroduction: what causes this?)

 

Actual Layer (mechanisms you identified):

• Rent-income gap mechanism: Rents rising 8% annually while income grows 2%

• Supply shortage mechanism: Only 1,200 new mid-sized family units built in 2024

 

↓ (retroduction: what underlying structures generate these mechanisms?)

 

Real Layer (causal structures - YOUR discussion contribution):

• [Mechanism 1] **Land supply monopoly structure**: Government controls 90% of land release,

  creating artificial scarcity that benefits developers

• [Mechanism 2] **Financialization mechanism**: Housing treated as investment asset rather than

  social good, driven by low interest rates and capital flow policies

• [Mechanism 3] **Welfare gap structure**: Middle-class excluded from public housing but

  income-too-low for private market sustainability [web:12][web:15]

Writing tip: Use phrases like "The generative mechanism underlying this hardship appears to be..." or "Through retroduction, we can infer that the real-layer structure causing this pattern is..."


3. Theory-Driven Analysis Using Chapter 2 Academic Theories

How-to steps:

·        Select 2-3 key theories from your literature review (Chapter 2) that best explain your findings

·        Apply each theory systematically to interpret your Chapter 4 findings

·        Evaluate whether findings support, challenge, or extend each theory

·        Note any theory-theory contradictions or theory-data gaps

Illustration for your topic:

Theory 1: Housing Stratification Theory (from Chapter 2)

·        Theory premise: Housing markets create social classes based on access

·        Your application: "Our findings support housing stratification theory: the middle-class occupies a 'stratification trap'—excluded from public housing (structured by income ceiling) yet unable to sustain private market costs (structured by rent-income disparity). This creates a new 'squeezed middle' class."

Theory 2: Latent Needs Theory (from Chapter 2)

·        Theory premise: People have unexpressed needs beneath surface behaviors

·        Your application: "Interview data reveals latent needs not captured in survey: while 68% reported 'cost burden' (surface), interviews revealed latent needs for 'housing stability for children's development' and 'psychological security.' This extends latent needs theory to include intergenerational housing concerns."

Theory 3: Pragmatic Utilitarianism (your methodology philosophy from Chapter 2/3)

·        Theory premise: Knowledge is valid if it has practical utility

·        Your application: "From a pragmatic standpoint, our findings have instrumental value: identifying the land supply monopoly mechanism provides policymakers a concrete intervention point. This validates our pragmatist approach's claim that mixed methods can produce actionable knowledge."

Writing tip: Structure as "Theory Application → Finding Interpretation → Theory Evaluation": "When applied to our survey data, housing stratification theory explains the 40-60% cost burden pattern as systematic stratification rather than individual failure, thereby supporting the theory's core premise while extending it to include middle-class vulnerability."


4. Toulmin's Model of Argument for Research Objectives

How-to steps:

·        Map each research objective from Chapter 1 to a Toulmin argument structure

·        For each objective, construct: Claim → Grounds → Warrant → Backing → Qualifier → Rebuttal

·        Use Chapter 4 findings as Grounds (data/evidence)

·        Use theories from Chapter 2 as Warrant (logical connection) and Backing (theory support)

·        Add Qualifiers (degree of certainty: "suggests," "strongly indicates," "likely")

·        Address Rebuttals (alternative explanations, limitations)

Illustration for your topic:

Research Objective 1: "To examine the extent of housing affordability hardship among HK middle-class families"

Toulmin Element

Your Chapter 5 Argument

Claim

"HK middle-class families face severe housing affordability hardship"

Grounds (Chapter 4 data)

"Survey: 68% spend >40% income on housing; 52% report 'major hardship' "

Warrant (logical connection)

"Housing research defines >30% income as cost-burdened; >40% indicates severe hardship "

Backing (theory support)

"Housing stratification theory confirms cost-burden thresholds predict social outcomes "

Qualifier (certainty)

"The evidence strongly suggests severe hardship (not 'proves')"

Rebuttal (alternative)

"Alternative: Families may have chosen lifestyle over housing. However, interview data shows 89% say they 'had no choice' due to market constraints "

Research Objective 2: "To identify causal mechanisms producing housing affordability hardship"

Toulmin Element

Your Chapter 5 Argument

Claim

"Three generative mechanisms produce middle-class housing hardship"

Grounds

"Survey: rent-income gap (8% vs 2%); Interviews: 'no affordable family units' "

Warrant

"Critical realism identifies mechanisms as real when they consistently generate observed patterns "

Backing

"Retroduction validates mechanisms when they explain 'what must be true' for events to occur "

Qualifier

"The evidence indicates these mechanisms (moderate certainty due to mixed methods convergence)"

Rebuttal

"Alternative: Individual financial management failures. Rebutted by: 74% of interviews report 'responsible budgeting' yet still unable to afford housing "

Writing tip: Explicitly label Toulmin elements in your discussion: "Our claim that [X] is grounded in [data], warranted by [theory], and qualified as [certainty level] because [rebuttal consideration]"


5. Normative Stakeholder Theory Discussion

How-to steps:

·        Identify all stakeholders in your housing affordability system (families, government, developers, banks, society)

·        Apply normative stakeholder theory: organizations/policies should serve stakeholder interests as a moral obligation (not just instrumental)

·        Evaluate who benefits vs. who suffers in current housing system

·        Argue for ethical redistribution of housing policy priorities using normative (moral) rather than instrumental (profit) reasoning

·        Connect to pragmatism: normative arguments have instrumental value if they produce better outcomes

Illustration for your topic:

Stakeholder Mapping for HK Housing System:

Stakeholder

Current Interest Satisfaction

Normative Theory Evaluation

Middle-class families

Suffering: 68% cost-burdened, children's education delayed

Moral obligation violated: Families have right to affordable housing as basic need 

Government

⚠️ Partial: Maintains land revenue but faces social unrest

Normative duty: Should prioritize citizen welfare over land sale revenue 

Developers

Benefiting: High profits from land scarcity

Instrumental only: Profits justified only if serve broader stakeholder interests 

Banks/Financial institutions

Benefiting: High mortgage interest, investment returns

Normative concern: Financialization treats housing as asset, violating moral purpose 

Lower-income families

Excluded: Public housing waitlist 5 years

Compounded injustice: Middle-class squeeze worsens lower-income exclusion

Future generations (children)

Harm: Education delayed, psychological stress

Moral imperative: Policy must protect intergenerational welfare 

Normative Argument Construction:

Claim: "HK housing policy should be restructured to prioritize middle-class affordability as a moral obligation"

Normative Stakeholder Reasoning:

1.    Ethics of care integration: "Normative stakeholder theory, when integrated with ethics of care, requires policy to address middle-class families' vulnerability as moral duty, not economic efficiency calculation "

2.    Stakeholder rights vs. interests: "While developers have interest in profits, middle-class families have rights to housing as basic human need. Normative theory prioritizes rights over interests "

3.    Intergenerational moral obligation: "Our findings show children's education delayed due to housing costs. Normative stakeholder theory extends moral obligation to future generations, requiring policy protect intergenerational welfare "

4.    Pragmatic normative validation: "From pragmatist standpoint, normative stakeholder argument has instrumental value: reorienting policy toward middle-class affordability reduces social unrest, increases economic productivity, and improves child outcomes—validating the normative claim through practical consequences "

Writing tip: Use normative language: "should," "ought," "moral obligation," "ethical duty," "rights-based" rather than instrumental language like "efficient," "profitable," "cost-effective"


Integration Strategy: How to Combine All 5 Methods in Chapter 5

Suggested Chapter 5 Structure:

text

5.1. Introduction: Chapter objectives and integrated approach

     • Briefly state you'll use triangulation, causal mechanisms, theory-driven analysis,

       Toulmin argumentation, and normative stakeholder theory

 

5.2. Triangulation of Mixed Methods Findings

     • Present convergence/complementarity/discrepancy matrix [Method 1]

     • Example: Cost burden convergence between survey and interviews

 

5.3. Causal Mechanism Analysis (Critical Realism Real Layer)

     • Use retroduction to identify 3 generative mechanisms [Method 2]

     • Example: Land supply monopoly → scarcity → high rents

 

5.4. Theory-Driven Analysis Applying Chapter 2 Theories

     • Apply Housing Stratification Theory [Method 3]

     • Apply Latent Needs Theory [Method 3]

     • Evaluate theory support/challenge/extension

 

5.5. Toulmin Argument Analysis of Research Objectives

     • Objective 1 argument: Claim-Grounds-Warrant-Backing-Qualifier-Rebuttal [Method 4]

     • Objective 2 argument: Same structure [Method 4]

     • Objective 3 argument: Same structure [Method 4]

 

5.6. Normative Stakeholder Theory Evaluation

     • Stakeholder mapping table [Method 5]

     • Normative argument for policy reorientation [Method 5]

 

5.7. Integrated Discussion: Synthesizing All 5 Approaches

     • How triangulation strengthens causal mechanism identification

     • How theory-driven analysis validates Toulmin arguments

     • How normative stakeholder theory provides ethical foundation for policy recommendations

     • Final concluding remarks on pragmatic value of integrated approach

Key integration principle: Each method builds on the previous:

·        Triangulation → establishes valid findings

·        Causal mechanisms → explains why findings occur

·        Theory-driven analysis → connects to existing knowledge

·        Toulmin argumentation → structures logical claims

·        Normative stakeholder → provides ethical justification

This creates a coherent, multi-layered discussion that satisfies pragmatist philosophy (instrumental value) while maintaining critical realist depth (real-layer mechanisms).


Practical Writing Tips

1.    Use explicit method labels: "Through triangulation, we find...", "Applying retroduction to identify causal mechanisms...", "From normative stakeholder theory perspective..."

2.    Maintain pragmatist stance: Always connect back to "What is the instrumental/explanatory value of this finding?"

3.    Balance certainty: Use qualifiers ("suggests," "indicates," "strongly supports") rather than absolute claims ("proves")

4.    Address rebuttals transparently: Acknowledge limitations and alternative explanations rather than hiding them

5.    Cite your Chapter 2 theories: When applying theory-driven analysis, explicitly reference Chapter 2 literature: "As discussed in Chapter 2, housing stratification theory posits..."

This integrated approach will create a robust, theoretically grounded Chapter 5 that demonstrates sophisticated methodological thinking while producing actionable knowledge for housing policy—aligning perfectly with your pragmatist mixed methods framework.




A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.