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Institutional Complexity and Individual Responses: Delineating the Boundaries of Partial Autonomy

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posted on 2016-08-24, 12:53 authored by Graham P. Martin, Graeme Currie, Simon Weaver, Rachael Finn, Ruth McDonald
Research highlights how coexisting institutional logics can sometimes offer opportunities for agency to enterprising actors in organizational fields. But macro- and micro-level studies using this framework diverge in their approach to understanding the consequences of institutional complexity for actor autonomy, and correspondingly in the opportunities they identify for agents to resist, reinterpret or make judicious use of institutional prescriptions. This paper seeks to bridge this gap, through a longitudinal, comparative case study of the trajectories of four ostensibly similar change initiatives in the same complex organizational field. It studies the influence of three dominant institutional logics (professional, market and corporate) in these divergent trajectories, elucidating the role of mediating influences, operating below the level of the field but above that of the actor, that worked to constrain or facilitate agency. The consequence for actors was a divergent realization of the relationship between the three logics, with very different consequences for their ability to advance their interests. Our findings offer an improved understanding of when and how institutional complexity facilitates autonomy, and suggests mediating influences at the level of the organization and the relationship it instantiates between carriers of logics, neglected by macro- and micro-level studies, that merit further attention.

History

Citation

Organization Studies, 2017, 38 (1), pp. 103-127

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Organization Studies

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

0170-8406

eissn

1741-3044

Acceptance date

2016-07-04

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-08-24

Publisher version

http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0170840616663241

Language

en

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