Sub-theme 56: Practices of Inter-Organizational Collaboration: Designed or Emerging?
Call for Papers
Inter-organizational collaboration in alliances and networks is becoming increasingly
prevalent. While previous research has largely focused on structural features, antecedents or consequences of inter-organizational
collaboration, the focus of this sub-theme is on the actual practices of inter-organizational collaboration. Related to the
EGOS theme of 'Design!?', our interest is in how inter-organizational practices come into being and change, partly as the
result of conscious design efforts and partly emerging from interactions between actors and serendipitous events. A promising
direction to study the interaction between design and emergence is to re-conceptualize them as a duality instead of a mutually
exclusive opposition.
Inter-organizational collaboration is becoming increasingly prevalent. Organizations collaborate
in activities including joint product development, the setting of technological standards, the pooling of resources and expertise,
supply chain coordination, buyer-supplier integration, and joint service delivery. Such collaborative activities involve the
integration of practices across boundaries (Bechky, 2003), which is even more challenging in the case of temporary and highly
dynamic inter-organizational collaboration (De Rond & Bouchikhi, 2004).
So far, research has largely focused
on structural features, antecedents and consequences of inter-organizational collaboration. As an innovative approach, we
suggest building upon the 'turn to practice' in organization studies. Practice studies have become an established stream of
research in the EGOS community, but have so far been largely grounded within one organization.
This sub-theme
focuses on the generation and evolution of inter-organizational practices. The setting is socially complex and layered: Inter-organizational
boundaries may coincide with differences in understanding and doing that challenge cross-boundary integration (Carlile, 2002).
Moreover, there may not be a clear division of labour or central point of control, requiring actors to negotiate what it is
that they are doing (Engeström et al., 1999).
We see two perspectives on the generation of inter-organizational
practices. On the one hand, these are perceived as the result of conscious design efforts, exemplified by approaches such
as business process engineering (e.g. Dhanaraj & Parkhe, 2006). Such a design perspective is associated with goal directedness,
future orientation, and planning. On the other hand, practices can also be described as emerging in communities, from path
dependent interactions between actors, artefacts, and serendipitous events, therefore rejecting the idea of practices as being
malleable (e.g. Levina & Vaast, 2005).
A promising direction to study the interaction between design and
emergence is to re-conceptualize them as a duality instead of a mutually exclusive opposition. A duality consists of opposing
poles that are also mutually dependent and mutually enabling (Farjoun, 2010). Such an approach could build on the conceptualization
of routines as generative systems (Pentland & Feldman, 2008) and the concept of design for emergence (Garud et al., 2006).
Such 'both/and' perspectives prevent getting stuck in either/or approaches.
We invite scholars from different
disciplinary background to discuss the development of inter-organizational practices from a design perspective, an emergence
perspective, or a combination of them. Contributions could come from studies on innovation and product development, but also
research on other types of alliances, networks and supply chains – as long as they address actual processes and practices.
We invite both theoretical and empirical papers. We encourage process research approaches, as these are particularly appropriate
for investigating the dynamics of practices and practicing within and between organizations.
Questions and themes
that may be addressed in this sub-theme include, but are not limited to:
- Which actors are involved in the generation of practices, and how does that affect design and emergence?
- The effects of the relational context (e.g., power, dependency and trust between partners) on the design and emergence of inter-organizational practices
- The need for design in order to initiate collaboration versus the impossibility to anticipate how practices will evolve
- The duality of design and emergence, e.g. design for emergence and the emergence of design through practices
- How do the relative importance of design and emergence, and their interaction, depend on types of practices and their scope?
- What limits of design are unveiled by inter-organizational coordination?
- What role do artefacts play in the design and emergence of inter-organizational practices?
References
Bechky, B.A. (2003): "Sharing meaning across occupational communities: The transformation of understanding on a production
floor." Organization Science, 14 (3), 312–330
Carlile, P.R. (2002): "A pragmatic view of knowledge and boundaries:
Boundary objects in new product development." Organization Science, 13, 442–455
De Rond, M. & H. Bouchikhi
(2004): "On the dialectics of strategic alliances." Organization Science, 15, 56–69
Dhanaraj, C. & A. Parkhe
(2006): "Orchestrating innovation networks." Academy of Management Review, 31 (3), 659–669
Engeström, Y., R.
Engeström & T. Vähääho (1999): "When the center does not hold: The importance of knotworking." In: S. Chaiken, M. Hedegaard
& U.J. Jensen (eds.): Activity theory and social practice: Cultural historical approaches. Aarhus: Aarhus University
Press, 345–374
Farjoun, M. (2010): "Beyond dualism: stability and change as a duality." Academy of Management Review,
35, 202–225
Garud, R., A. Kumaraswamy & V. Sambamurthy (2006): "Emergent by design: performance and transformation
at Infosys Technologies." Organization Science, 17, 277–286
Levina, N. & E. Vaast (2005): "The emergence
of boundary spanning competence in practice: implications for implementation and use of information systems." MIS Quarterly,
29, 335–363
Pentland, B.T. & M.S. Feldman (2008): "Designing routines: On the folly of designing artifacts, while
hoping for patterns of action." Information and Organization, 18, 235–250