The March 2006 issue of American Behavioral Scientist, entitled
Institutions in the Making: Identity, Power and the Emergence of
New Organizational Forms features new insights on institutional
change and theory, exploring, collectively and individually, how
new institutions first emerge within and among organizations. Based
on a workshop entitled "New Public and Private Models of
Management: Sensemaking and Institutions" in Skagen, Denmark in
Summer 2005, the 11 articles look at key organizational trends in
institutional change, including corporate governance, social
responsibility, and new work roles.
The first two articles deal with mediating the micro-macro
divide in institutional theory. Pedersen and Dobbin offer insights
into the four types of processes through which practices and ideas
from the wider organizational field become distinct organizational
cultures. Hallett and Ventresca reexamine Gouldner's Patterns of
Industrial Bureaucracy and the "coupling" processes that were
considered key mechanisms in the emergence of new institutional
forms.
Campbell and Boxenbaum focus on the rise of corporate social
responsibility. Campbell explores the political and economic
motives that underlie the current definition of corporate social
responsibility, and raises the question of why corporations ever
act in socially responsible ways. Boxenbaum shows how a practice
from one place can be adapted into a different environment by going
through the processes of individual preferences, strategic
reframing, and local grounding.
The next three articles target corporate governance in diverse
arenas such as the European defense industry and the American
thrift industry. Fligstein and Enrione, Mazza, and Zerboni review
how decision-makers negotiate new institutional models with
interested groups, and how decision-makers may end up creating
institutions that are not anything like what they originally
envisioned. Haveman and Rao investigate how change in the form of
governance occurred over time and circumstance.
Patriotta and Lanzara, Meyer and Hammerschmid, and Westenholz
each consider how work roles and identities become
institutionalized and how they affect organizations. Drawing on
wide-ranging examples from an automotive factory, public
administrators in Austria, and IT workers, the last three articles
attempt to account for the global and local dynamics that shape
worker identities and roles.
Together these articles suggest a number of promising research
avenues for those interested in how new organizational elements,
ideas, and practices come about and evolve. This issue should be in
the library of every forward-thinking manager, organizational
behaviorist, industrial and organizational sociologist, and
business school professors and students.
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