Sub-theme 12: (SWG) Understanding Organization as Process: Organization without Design
Call for Papers
The perspective of organization as a fluid, often uncertain and inherently open phenomenon
is receiving increasing attention in organization and management studies. This increase in attention is accompanied by a growing
appreciation of the fleeting and dynamic nature of work characterized as much by coping and innovative adaptation as it is
the conscious application of pre-figured design or enacting routines. If the world we study is less a world of substances
than it is processes, there occurs a profound shift in organizational concern in which securing relationships between inputs
and outputs and the occupation of clear and distinct positions gives way to experiment and the capacity to make new connections
and 'move on'. A process perspective opens up the ‘living’ character of organizational life-worlds.
This sub-theme
urges submissions to consider how process views might extend and even dissolve the idea of organizational design. They might
begin with a basic insight from process studies. Rather than understand design as something imposed upon life (the organization
is built as an institutional structure within which agents act), process views extend the capacity of living to organization
itself. Organization is life; a coming into being and a rolling together of people, relations, technologies, routines and
practices. From this perspective, workers, managers, leaders, tools and resources, often been studied as 'substances', are
instead approached as processes in the making, and institutional and physical forces as the structuring by which these processes
find stability.
Process views have major implications for how we conceptualize and study organization. It challenges
scholars to transcend the dualisms with which they typically think. Global and local; organization and environment; subject
and object; stability and change; structure and use; social construction and reality; individual and collective; space and
time; visibility and invisibility; presence and absence; self and other; past and future; all of these conceptual oppositions
are brought into question. Process perspectives bring into critical relief the traditional sense of objectivity and neutrality
that has characterized social science to date. They also challenge scholars to consider how in a world of process, a language
of research and management that is dedicated to the identification of ‘things’ might be re-shaped. In wrestling with these
questions, papers and conversation in the stream will not be limited to any one sub-discipline.
For this track,
firstly, we will explore the potentiality and distinctiveness of a process perspective in relation to organization studies.
A special emphasis will be on the grounding of process thinking and how that connects to current debates in the field. Therefore,
we invite for this sub-theme:
- Conceptual papers that investigate how main contributors towards process thinking can contribute to contemporary organizational concerns
- Papers that discuss salient distinctions between theorists or strands of theories in process thinking and the impacts of the distinctions in relation to organization studies
- Papers that bring other theoretical orientations (such as pragmatism, phenomenology or symbolic interactionism) into conversation with process work
- Empirical papers drawing on particular process theorists or orientations to discuss specific phenomenon such as strategy, leadership and entrepreneurship, to name a few
- Considerations of how an emphasis on movement and flow influence how we engage in fieldwork, make sense of fieldwork material and write our accounts.