TY - CHAP AB - Setting the multinational enterprise (MNE) apart on the basis of a weakly specified idea of foreignness may impede progress in international business (IB). The discipline lacks a paradigm to assimilate the idea of foreignness as an incident of internationality, a global condition describing the political context within which the MNE functions and which confers uniqueness on that institution. However, a plausible re-imagining of the MNE is possible and useful, and here a candidate for such an ontological shift is proffered. Rather than a firm struggling in one or more foreign contexts, the MNE is reconstructed as a foreigner contending with the responsibilities of a firm. The proposed re-imagining of the MNE is experimentally substituted for the received ontology in different IB research contexts. It transpires that this ontological revision maintains intelligibility in those contexts while usefully exposing new directions in which to pursue knowledge. In consequence of re-imagining the MNE, that institution may be situated more precisely amid the international system’s primal constituents, and links may be more effectively established with other bodies of research addressing the functioning of the international political economic system. VL - 26 SN - 978-1-78190-713-9, 978-1-78190-712-2/1571-5027 DO - 10.1108/S1571-5027(2013)0000026013 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/S1571-5027(2013)0000026013 AU - Burmester Brent ED - Timothy M. Devinney ED - Torben Pedersen ED - Laszlo Tihanyi PY - 2013 Y1 - 2013/01/01 TI - Ontology and IB: Re-Imagining the Multinational T2 - Philosophy of Science and Meta-Knowledge in International Business and Management T3 - Advances in International Management PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 197 EP - 218 Y2 - 2024/09/21 ER -