The Institutional Construction of Organizations
International and Longitudinal Studies
Edited by:
- W. Richard Scott - Stanford University, USA
- Soren Moller Christensen
August 1995 | 384 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Institutional theory is on the rise. During the past three decades, the field of organization studies has witnessed a succession of theoretical perspectives--including contingency theory, resource dependency, and population ecology--that focus attention on one or another aspect of organizations. Only institutional theory highlights the importance of the wider social and cultural environment as the "ground" in which organizations are rooted.
The original work in The Institutional Construction of Organizations sheds new light on the study of organizations. The editors bring together work from two different research traditions--the United States and Europe. The collection also layers in several important perspectives of institutional theory, including empirical observations, longitudinal analyses, market-based organizational forms, and attention to the concepts of agency and strategy. The result is a finely textured, fully developed work for scholars and advanced students of organizational theory and behavior.
W Richard Scott and Sóren Christensen
Preface
W Richard Scott
Introduction
PART ONE: ACCOUNTING FOR INSTITUTIONS
Peter Abell
The New Institutionalism and Rational Choice Theory
Theresa K Lant and Joel A C Baum
Cognitive Sources of Socially Constructed Competitive Groups
Mark C Suchman
Localism and Globalization in Institutional Analysis
PART TWO: ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATION TO CONFLICTING AND SHIFTING INSTITUTIONAL AND TECHNICAL ENVIRONMENTS
Sóren Christensen and Jan Molin
Origin and Transformation of Organizations
Jan Mouritsen and Peter Sk[ae]b[ae]k
Civilization, Art, and Accounting
Finn Borum and Ann Westenholz
The Incorporation of Multiple Institutional Models
PART THREE: INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTS ON FIRMS AND FIELDS
Christian Knudsen
The Competence View of the Firm
Stephen J Mezias
Using Institutional Theory to Understand For-Profit Sectors
PART FOUR: INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTS ON INDUSTRIES
Patricia H Thornton
Accounting for Acquisition Waves
Raghu Garud and Arun Kumaraswamy
Coupling the Technical and Institutional Faces of Janus in Network Industries
Peter Karn[o with a line through]e
Institutional Interpretations and Explanations of Differences in American and Danish Approaches to Innovation
Frank Dobbin
The Origins of Economic Principles
W Richard Scott and Sóren Christensen
Conclusion