Sub-theme 09: Dynamics of Legitimacy and Reputation in Practice
Call for Papers
Issues around corporate legitimacy and reputation have become part of everyday life for organizations. With increasing
public and media attention to organizational activities, a range of social actors, including large companies, NGOs, media,
social movement groups, communities and others, are adding new dimensions to concepts of and practice around legitimacy and
reputation. This sub-theme is concerned with the challenges and tensions in the notions of legitimacy and reputation and how
they are worked upon in structure and practice.
The premise of the sub-theme is that while there is both a large
literature on corporate reputation, public relations, and issues management on one hand, and on the other, the institutionalization
of managerial and organizational ideas and their concrete translation into organizational practice, these two literatures
have rarely been brought together. Thus the former strand of research sometimes stops short of the concrete organizing practices
pertaining to the managerial concerns relating to reputation, legitimacy etc. At the same time, the latter strand of research
has yet to engage more directly in the concrete organization of new forms of attempting to manage relations to the environment,
to the media, to NGOs, to political bodies, and others, all of whom are deemed important for organizational legitimacy and
for reputation.
Engaging with legitimacy and reputation involves new ways of knowing and organizing. It involves
the elaboration of particular strategic perspectives on the organization and its environment, the creation of dedicated organization
units or roles to enact such perspectives, and the shaping of particular types of strategic responses in relation to problems
of legimacy and reputation. These complex dynamics open up interesting questions both about legitimacy and also of organizational
reputation.
Going beyond the efforts of individual organizations to gain legitimacy simply by way of elaborating
their formal organizational structures and decoupling of such structures from the daily activities, we would like to pay our
attention to organizational practices that are explicitly dedicated to the management of reputation and legitimacy: how do
such practices play out, how are they organized (and managed), what kinds of knowledge do they build upon, how does this knowledge
relate to other forms of knowledge (and practices) within particular organizations, etc? Because of the internal-external
nature of legitimacy and reputation, there may be particular implications for organizing practices and knowledge, and of new
types of conflicts and dilemmas that may arise.
We invite contributions that relate to a variety of organization
theory approaches – ranging from institutional theory and resource dependency theory to sense-making, translation, and discursive
approaches. We also invite contributions within public relations and reputation management.
We invite contributions
that deal with a variety of organizational settings both those that are traditionally thought to have already engaged extensively
with reputation management and public relation practices (key industrial sectors) and also settings where such practices are
only emerging, such as culture and arts, education and research, health care, and social movement groups. We are also interested
in what might be considered 'low-legitimacy' industries such as tobacco, armaments, and fast food, for example.