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How do institutions influence and shape cognition and action in
individuals and organizations, and how are they in turn shaped by
them? Various social science disciplines have offered a range of
theories and perspectives to provide answers to this question.
Within organization studies in recent years, several scholars have
developed the institutional logics perspective. An institutional
logic is the set of material practices and symbolic systems
including assumptions, values, and beliefs by which individuals and
organizations provide meaning to their daily activity, organize
time and space, and reproduce their lives and experiences. This
approach affords significant insights, methodologies, and research
tools, to analyze the multiple combinations of factors that may
determine cognition, behaviour, and rationalities. In tracing the
development of the institutional logics perspective from earlier
institutional theory, the book analyzes seminal research,
illustrating how and why influential works on institutional theory
motivated a distinct new approach to scholarship on institutional
logics. The book shows how the institutional logics perspective
transforms institutional theory. It presents novel theory, further
elaborates the institutional logics perspective, and forges new
linkages to key literatures on practice, identity, and social and
cognitive psychology. It develops the microfoundations of
institutional logics and institutional entrepreneurship, proposing
a set of mechanisms that go beyond meta-theory, integrating this
work with macro theory on institutional logics into a cross-levels
model of cultural heterogeneity. By incorporating current
psychological understanding of human behaviour and linking it to
sociological perspectives, it aims to provide an encompassing
framework for institutional analysis, and to be an essential and
accessible reference for scholars and advanced students of
organizational behaviour, organization and management theory,
business strategy, and cultural sociology.
Institutional logics, the underlying governing principles of
societal sectors, strongly influence organizational decision
making. Any shift in institutional logics results in a similar
shift in attention to alternative problems and solutions and in new
determinants for executive decisions. Examining changes in
institutional logics in higher-education publishing, this book
links cultural analysis with organizational decision making to
develop a theory of attention and explain how executives
concentrate on certain market characteristics to the exclusion of
others. Analyzing both qualitative and quantitative data from the
1950s to the 1990s, the author shows how higher education
publishing moved from a culture of independent domestic publishers
focused on creating markets for books based on personal, relational
networks to a culture of international conglomerates that create
markets from corporate hierarchies. This book offers broader
lessons beyond publishing—its theory is applicable to explaining
institutional changes in organizational leadership, strategy, and
structure occurring in all professional services industries.
The cultural industries have been considered unique and out of the
mainstream, not a subject for developing general theory, and
therefore relatively understudied by organizational scholars. We
argue it is no longer the case that cultural industries are so
unique representing small markets and industries of little matter
to research in the sociology of organizations. Cultural industries
are now one of the fastest growing and most vital sectors in the
U.S. and global economies (U.S. Census Reports, 2000). This growth
is fueled in large part by the nature of the symbolic, creative,
and knowledge-based assets of cultural industries. In this volume,
the manuscripts recognize that the functions of the symbolic,
creative, and knowledge-based assets of cultural industries are
also characteristic of the professional services and other
industries as well. The manuscripts illustrate how the boundaries
become blurred between cultural and other related industries that
also rest upon the endeavors of and knowledge of creative workers.
These dynamic interactions in the commercial landscape between the
cultural, professional services, and other industries provide a
richer context for the authors in this volume to examine changes in
a specific market or industry, and also to advance our
understanding of the institutional transformation of organizations.
How do institutions influence and shape cognition and action in
individuals and organizations, and how are they in turn shaped by
them? Various social science disciplines have offered a range of
theories and perspectives to provide answers to this question.
Within organization studies in recent years, several scholars have
developed the institutional logics perspective. An institutional
logic is the set of material practices and symbolic systems
including assumptions, values, and beliefs by which individuals and
organizations provide meaning to their daily activity, organize
time and space, and reproduce their lives and experiences. This
approach affords significant insights, methodologies, and research
tools, to analyze the multiple combinations of factors that may
determine cognition, behaviour, and rationalities. In tracing the
development of the institutional logics perspective from earlier
institutional theory, the book analyzes seminal research,
illustrating how and why influential works on institutional theory
motivated a distinct new approach to scholarship on institutional
logics. The book shows how the institutional logics perspective
transforms institutional theory. It presents novel theory, further
elaborates the institutional logics perspective, and forges new
linkages to key literatures on practice, identity, and social and
cognitive psychology. It develops the microfoundations of
institutional logics and institutional entrepreneurship, proposing
a set of mechanisms that go beyond meta-theory, integrating this
work with macro theory on institutional logics into a cross-levels
model of cultural heterogeneity. By incorporating current
psychological understanding of human behaviour and linking it to
sociological perspectives, it aims to provide an encompassing
framework for institutional analysis, and to be an essential and
accessible reference for scholars and advanced students of
organizational behaviour, organization and management theory,
business strategy, and cultural sociology.
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