Publication | Closed Access
The Context of Organization Structures
1.1K
Citations
18
References
1969
Year
Organizing (Management)International ManagementOrganisational Structure EvaluationOrganization StructuresOrganizational CommunicationOrganizational SystemOrganizational CharacteristicOrganizational StructureOrganization-environment RelationshipManagementBusinessOrganization TheoryStrategic ManagementHuman Resource ManagementLine ControlOrganizational BehaviorEnglish Midlands
Aspects of organizational context that have been held to be relevant to organizational structure were examined. Seven primary concepts of organizational context, viz.: origin and history, ownership and control, size, charter, technology, location and dependence on other organizations, were analyzed and operationally defined scales constructed. These were used as independent variables in a multivariate' regression analysis to predict three underlying dimensions of organization structure previously established. The size of the correlations obtained on a sample of 46 organizations in the English Midlands (0.75 with structuring of activities using size and technology as predictors; 0.75 with concentration of authority using dependence and location as predictors; 0.57 with line control of workflow, using the operating variability scale of charter as a predictor) indicates that these aspects of context are salient for structure. The framework of contextual and structural variables is seen as making possible processual studies on a much more rigorous comparative basis than before.'
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