Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The challenge of sustaining organizational hybridity: The role of power and agency

View through CrossRef
Hybrid organizations harbor different and often conflicting institutional logics, thus facing the challenge of sustaining their hybridity. Crucial to overcoming this challenge is the identification process of organizational actors. We propose a theorization of how power relations affect this process. More specifically, we argue that an actor’s power influences their own professional identity: an increase [decrease] in their power, via the heightened [diminished] control that this power provides them over organizational discourse, boosts [threatens] their identity. Our theorization has implications for the longevity of a newly adopted logic within an organization. If the new logic modifies incumbent power relations, the identities of (formerly and newly) powerful individuals are influenced, which may lead these individuals to promote or resist the new logic, thereby affecting the odds that the logic will survive within the organization. We illustrate our theorization with a case study in a professional service firm. Our study contributes to nascent research on hybrid organizations by emphasizing the role of power and agency in the longevity of hybridity.
Title: The challenge of sustaining organizational hybridity: The role of power and agency
Description:
Hybrid organizations harbor different and often conflicting institutional logics, thus facing the challenge of sustaining their hybridity.
Crucial to overcoming this challenge is the identification process of organizational actors.
We propose a theorization of how power relations affect this process.
More specifically, we argue that an actor’s power influences their own professional identity: an increase [decrease] in their power, via the heightened [diminished] control that this power provides them over organizational discourse, boosts [threatens] their identity.
Our theorization has implications for the longevity of a newly adopted logic within an organization.
If the new logic modifies incumbent power relations, the identities of (formerly and newly) powerful individuals are influenced, which may lead these individuals to promote or resist the new logic, thereby affecting the odds that the logic will survive within the organization.
We illustrate our theorization with a case study in a professional service firm.
Our study contributes to nascent research on hybrid organizations by emphasizing the role of power and agency in the longevity of hybridity.

Related Results

Organizational discourse and subjectivity
Organizational discourse and subjectivity
This article seeks to contribute to the debate on the relationship between organizational discourses and subjectivity, revolving around whether organizational discourses determine ...
Strategic design research: Co-designing organizational transformation from within
Strategic design research: Co-designing organizational transformation from within
In this article, we discuss and argue for the value of working with strategic design in organizational settings through inventive research practices rooted in co-design and design ...
Connecting player and character agency in videogames
Connecting player and character agency in videogames
In game studies, ‘agency’ is typically defined in terms of the ‘choices’ or ‘freedom’ granted to the player, which prioritises the influence of ludology on player engagement while ...
Hybridity and Nomadology in Inner Asia
Hybridity and Nomadology in Inner Asia
AbstractIdentity, especially modern national identity, entails ideas of authenticity and hybridity. For much of the history of Mongolian studies, authenticity has been a staple of ...
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was a significant political theorist who could be regarded as the founder of social contract theories. Hobbes’s philosophy is worthy of attention in the h...
When "Life Is but a Dream": Obliterating Politics Through Business Process Reengineering?
When "Life Is but a Dream": Obliterating Politics Through Business Process Reengineering?
In this article, we explore the genesis and operation of Business Process Reengineering (BPR) within a medium-sized U.K. bank from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s. We dismiss the c...
Organizational Citizenship: A Review, Proposed Model, and Research Agenda
Organizational Citizenship: A Review, Proposed Model, and Research Agenda
Organizational citizenship was recently proposed as a form of job performance which may be more strongly related to job satisfaction than performance measures employed in previous ...
What We Share Is Who We Are and What We Do: How Emotional Intimacy Shapes Organizational Identification and Collaborative Behaviors
What We Share Is Who We Are and What We Do: How Emotional Intimacy Shapes Organizational Identification and Collaborative Behaviors
We focus on the concept of emotional intimacy among organizational members and investigate its influence on both their (a) perceptions and (b) behaviors. With regard to employees’ ...

Back to Top