Publication | Closed Access
Innovation and Crisis in Organizational Analysis
96
Citations
47
References
1977
Year
Organizational IssuePractical CommitmentsEducationOrganizational ComplexityOrganization ScienceOrganizational AnalysisInnovation ManagementOrganizational BehaviorOrganizing (Management)Practical CommitmentManagementOrganizational SystemsStrategyStrategic ManagementInnovationInnovation StudyOrganizational SystemOrganizational CommunicationOrganizational StructureOrganization DevelopmentSociologyBusinessOrganization TheoryRational Structuring
The study of organizations has been guided by a paradigm consisting of interrelated theoretical, methodological, and practical commitments. Theoretically, a problematic of rational structuring has dominated the field. This has been coupled with positivist methodology and a practical commitment to administrative problem-solving. The paradigm has fallen into crisis as a consequence of work on several analytical problems—action, power, levels, and process. Work on the action problem emphasizes the grounding of organizational patterns in the interactions and practices of people. Patterns are also seen in recent work as the expression of power relationships. The levels problem involves the analysis of interpenetration and interdependence between distinct sectors or layers of social structure. The concern with process involves the continuous transformation of organizational patterns. The central issue growing out of the work on these analytical problems is how to handle theoretically the production and reproduction of organizational patterns.
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