"It is now three decades since the "new"institutionalism burst on the intellectual scene and a most appropriate time to take stock of missteps, accomplishments, and future directions. This theoretical thrust has revitalized many scholarly arenas across the social sciences, but none more so then organization studies. Royston Greenwood and his co-editors have assembled a stellar stable of scholars who collectively provide a comprehensive assessment if this vibrant field."—W. Richard Scott, Professor Emeritus, Stanford University"Institutional theory has become the dominant conversation in organization theory. In this volume many of its leading exponents show where it is going, what it can do and how it engages with related fields."—Stewart Clegg, Aston Business School and University of Technology, Sydney"This Handbook is "must reading" for any organization and management scholar. It provides a timely and comprehensive update of institutional theory and its relationships with other organization theories."—Andrew H. Van de Ven, Vernon Heath Professor of Organizational Innovation and Change, Carlson School of Management, University of MinnesotaInstitutional theory lies at the heart of organizational theory, yet until now, no book has successfully taken stock of this important and wide ranging theoretical perspective. With insight and clarity, the editors of this handbook have collected and arranged papers so the readers are provided with a map of the field and pointed in the direction of new and emerging themes. The academics who have contributed to this handbook are respected internationally and represent a cross section of expert organization theorists, sociologists and political scientists. Chapters are a rich mix of theory, how to conduct institutional organizational analysis and empirical work.

Coalface Institutionalism

Coalface institutionalism

Famous personages and also periods in the history … may be reassessed, some being demoted and others raised up or even rediscovered … Some are found worthless, stale; others provide stimulating ideas and even technology which can be built on … their ideas and work are more ‘relevant’ - not merely more useful or suggestive - than that of many contemporaries. No matter that the ancestors might be turning uncomfortably in their graves if they knew how their lives and works were reinterpreted and selectively used. (Strauss, 1982: 179)

Institutionalism, Social Construction and Ethnomethodology

Neo-institutionalism appeared in the late 1970s with the goal of challenging rational theories of organizing that had ruled organization studies since the 1960s (Zucker 1977, Meyer and Rowan 1977, DiMaggio ...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles