Sub-theme 44: New Approaches to Organizing Collaborative Knowledge Creation

Convenors:
Georg Fredrik von Krogh
ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Samer Faraj
McGill University, Canada
Christine Moser
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Call for Papers


Over the past few decades, scientific and technological developments have radically reshaped the way in which people organize collaborative knowledge creation. Examples of new approaches to knowledge creation include innovation contests, scientific consortia, self-managed teams, and technology enabled forms of organizing such as online communities for open source software development, and knowledge platforms such as Wikipedia (e.g., Fjeldstad et al., 2012; Osterloh & Frey, 2000; Puranam et al., 2014). These new approaches to knowledge creation are particularly compelling for their open and collaborative organizational forms (Faraj et al., 2016), which allow ideas for new products and services to be sourced from anywhere and anyone (e.g., Franke et al., 2014; Harhoff & Lakhani, 2016; King & Lakhani, 2013) and collaboratively implemented.
 
Another common feature of new organizational forms is their agent-centric design, based on principles of self-organization (Anderson, 1999) and local decision-making. This allows interdependencies among individuals and knowledge creation tasks to surface in unexpected ways (Ben-Menahem et al., 2015) and enables the creation of complex knowledge products using the skills and efforts of a fluid pool of individuals (e.g., Boudreau, 2010; Boudreau et al., 2011; Fjeldstad et al., 2012; Gassmann et al., 2010; Lee & Cole, 2003). Moreover, in contrast to traditional organizational knowledge creation processes, in new organizational forms, agents’ roles and responsibilities are typically not strictly confined by formal hierarchy or employment contracts, but rather shaped by emerging opportunities for exercising agency based on individual expertise and self-efficacy beliefs (Bandura, 1989; Faraj et al., 2011; von Krogh et al., 2003; Puranam et al., 2014).
 
While research on new organizational forms is burgeoning, much remains to be understood about the mechanisms whereby knowledge creation unfolds in settings characterized by a flat hierarchy, voluntary membership, and open organizational boundaries (e.g., Fjeldstad et al., 2012; Gulati et al., 2012; von Krogh & von Hippel, 2003; O’Mahony & Lakhani, 2011). In addition, the role of knowledge itself, i.e. its “materiality” and diffusion of meaning in online and offline networks (Moser et al., 2017) as well as the underlying, enabling technology such as algorithms and artificial intelligence (Moser et al., 2021) are promising avenues for future research. This sub-theme seeks to bring together research advancing organizational knowledge creation theory (e.g., Grant, 1996; Kogut & Zander, 1992; Nonaka, 1994; Nonaka & von Krogh, 2009) and organization theory on innovation, design, and coordination by exploring how individuals organize collaborative knowledge creation in new forms of organizing (e.g., Faraj et al., 2011; Faraj et al., 2016).
 
We welcome papers that focus on micro-level mechanisms, organizational and network-based analysis, and their intersection. We invite contributions that advance, contest, or change our understanding of collaborative knowledge creation by challenging fundamental assumptions and core questions in organizational theory. Papers may address issues related (but not limited) to the following questions:

  • What are unconventional forms of organizing and prevalent forms of coordination?

  • Which novel and known coordination problems arise in new approaches to collaborative knowledge creation and how do individuals resolve these challenges?

  • What is the nature and function of human agency in new approaches to collaborative knowledge creation?

  • What is the nature and function of knowledge in new approaches to collaborative knowledge creation?

  • How are collaborative knowledge creation efforts shaped by, and how do they shape new technologies?

  • How do new forms of organizing afford surprising discoveries and knowledge creation in unconventional domains?

  • How are fundamental issues related to the distribution and combination of knowledge sources implicated by new approaches to organizing knowledge creation?

  • How do new forms of organizing advance our general understanding of emergent properties self-organizing systems?

  • What are the boundaries and limitations of specific new approaches to organizing knowledge creation?

  • How do identities and cultures evolve in new forms of organizing?

  • What is the role of technology, e.g. artifical intelligence or machine-learning algorithms, in organizational knowledge creation?

 
The sub-theme intends to stimulate a constructive dialogue around conceptual and empirical research across these and related issues. High-quality, novel contributions in both early and later stages of development are warmly invited.
 


References


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  • Bandura, A. (1989): “Human agency in social cognitive theory.” American Psychologist, 44 (9), 1175–1184.
  • Ben-Menahem, S., von Krogh, G., Erden, Z., & Schneider, A. (2015): “Coordinating knowledge creation in multidisciplinary teams: Evidence from early-stage drug discovery.” Academy of Management Journal, 59 (4), 1308–1338.
  • Boudreau, K. (2010): “Open platform strategies and innovation: Granting access vs. devolving control.” Management Science, 56 (10), 1849–1872.
  • Boudreau, K., Lacetera, N., & Lakhani, K.R. (2011): “Incentives and problem uncertainty in innovation contests: An empirical analysis.” Management Science, 57 (5), 843–863.
  • Faraj, S., Jarvenppa, S.L., & Majchrzak, A. (2011): “Knowledge collaboration in online communities.” Organization Science, 22 (5), 1224–1239.
  • Faraj, S., von Krogh, G., Monteiro, E., & Lakhani, K.R. (2016): “Online community as space for knowledge flows.” Information Systems Research, 27 (4), 668–684.
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  • Harhoff, D., & Lakhani, K.R. (2016): Revolutionizing Innovation. Cambridge: MIT Press.
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  • Moser, C., den Hond, F., & Lindebaum, D. (2021): “Morality in the age of artificially intelligent algorithms.” Academy of Management Learning and Education, forthcoming.
  • Moser, C., Groenewegen, P., & Ferguson, J.E. (2017): “Meaning in organizational networks – From social to digital and back.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations, 53, 211–229.
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  • Nonaka, I. (1994): “A dynamic theory of organizational knowledge creation.” Organization Science, 5 (1), 14–37.
  • O’Mahony, S., & Lakhani, K.R. (2011): “Organizations in the shadow of communities.” Research in the Sociology of Organizations, 33, 3–36.
  • Osterloh, M., & Frey, B.S. (2000): “Motivation, knowledge transfer, and organizational forms.” Organization Science, 11 (5), 538–550.
  • Puranam, P., Alexy, O., & Reitzig, M. (2014): “What’s ‘new’ about new forms of organizing?” Academy of Management Review, 39 (2), 162–180.
  • von Krogh, G., & von Hippel, E. (2003): “Special issue on open source software development.” Research Policy, 32 (7), 1149–1157.
  • von Krogh, G., Spaeth, S., & Lakhani, K.R. (2003): “Community, joining, and specialization in open source software innovation: A case study.” Research Policy, 32 (7), 1217–1241.
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Georg Fredrik von Krogh is the Chaired Professor of Strategic Management and Innovation at ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Georg has published widely on topics such as organizational knowledge creation, open-source software development, online communities, and technological innovation.
Samer Faraj holds the Canada Research Chair in Technology, Management & Healthcare at the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University, Canada. His current research focuses on complex collaboration in settings as diverse as health care organizations, knowledge teams, and online communities. Samer is also interested in how emergent social technologies are transforming organizations and allowing new forms of coordination and organizing to emerge.
Christine Moser is an Associate Professor of Organization Sciences at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Her research is on corporate social responsibility (CSR), knowledge flows in social networks, and the role of technology in social interaction.