Prelims
Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory: Post Millennium Perspectives
ISBN: 978-1-78635-386-3, eISBN: 978-1-78635-385-6
ISSN: 0733-558X
Publication date: 17 February 2017
Citation
(2017), "Prelims", Dörrenbächer, C. and Geppert, M. (Ed.) Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory: Post Millennium Perspectives (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 49), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxi. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0733-558X20160000049016
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS AND ORGANIZATION THEORY: POST MILLENNIUM PERSPECTIVES
Series Page
RESEARCH IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZATIONS
Series Editor: Michael Lounsbury
Recent Volumes:
Volume 38: | Configurational Theory and Methods in Organizational Research |
Volume 39A: | Institutional Logics in Action, Part A |
Volume 39B: | Institutional Logics in Action, Part B |
Volume 40: | Contemporary Perspectives on Organizational Social Networks |
Volume 41: | Religion and Organization Theory |
Volume 42: | Organizational Transformation and Scientific Change: The Impact of Institutional Restructuring on Universities and Intellectual Innovation |
Volume 43: | Elites on Trial |
Volume 44: | Institutions and Ideals: Philip Selznick’s Legacy for Organizational Studies |
Volume 45: | Towards a Comparative Institutionalism: Forms, Dynamics and Logics across the Organizational Fields of Health and Higher Education |
Volume 46: | The University under Pressure |
Volume 47: | The Structuring of Work in Organizations |
Volume 48A: | How Institutions Matter! |
Volume 48B: | How Institutions Matter! |
Title Page
RESEARCH IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZATIONS VOLUME 49
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS AND ORGANIZATION THEORY: POST MILLENNIUM PERSPECTIVES
EDITED BY
CHRISTOPH DÖRRENBÄCHER
Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany
MIKE GEPPERT
School of Economics and Business Administration, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany
United Kingdom – North America – Japan India – Malaysia – China
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First edition 2017
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ISBN: 978-1-78635-386-3
ISSN: 0733-558X (Series)
List of Figures
Chapter 3 The Role of Headquarters in the Contemporary MNC: A Contingency Model | |
Fig. 1. | Summary of Research on MNC Organizational Design. |
Fig. 2. | A Contingency Framework for Better Understanding HQ’s Roles in a Contemporary MNC. |
Chapter 4 Between Local Mooring and Global Orientation: A Neo-institutional Theory Perspective on the Contemporary Multinational Corporation | |
Fig. 1. | Globally Oriented Corporations: Examples for the Matter of Degree. |
Chapter 7 Language as a Meeting Ground for Research on the MNC and Organization Theory | |
Fig. 1. | Hub-and-Spoke Model with Dyads of Headquarters and National Subsidiaries. |
Fig. 2. | Network Model with National Subsidiaries. |
Fig. 3. | Network Model with Subnational Units. |
Chapter 8 Headquarter-Subsidiary Relations in the Multinational Corporation as a Discursive Struggle | |
Fig. 1. | HQ-Subsidiary Relations as Three Levels of the Discursive Struggle in the MNC. |
Chapter 11 The Multinational Corporation as a Playing Field of Power: A Bourdieusian Approach | |
Fig. 1. | Model of Change in the MNC Institutional Playing Field of Power |
Chapter 13 MNCs and Politicization from Outside | |
Fig. 1. | Critical News Reports about Global Toy Production in the US, UK, and Germany. |
Fig. 2. | Critical News Reports about the Athletic Footwear Industry in the US, UK, and Germany. |
Chapter 14 The Dark Side of MNCs | |
Fig. 1. | Black International Business: A Taxonomy of Ethics and Legitimacy. |
Chapter 15 Private Governance as Regulatory Substitute or Complement? A Comparative Institutional Approach to CSR Adoption by Multinational Corporations | |
Fig. 1. | Mean Human Rights CSR Adoption, Grouped by MNC Home Country. |
Fig. 2. | Mean Human Rights CSR Adoption, Grouped by MNC Home Country Labor Power Scores. |
Fig. 3. | Mean Human Rights CSR Adoption, Grouped by Quantiles of Labor Rights Violation Score. |
Fig. 4. | Effect of Weighted Host Country Labor Rights Violations on CSR Adoption over Different Levels of Home Country Labor Power. |
List of Tables
Chapter 3 The Role of Headquarters in the Contemporary MNC: A Contingency Model | |
Table 1. | Headquarters Role in an MNC and How Headquarters Adds Value to an MNC. |
Table 2. | Important Differences between Hierarchical Structures and Network Structures that Influence their Information-Processing Capacities. |
Chapter 4 Between Local Mooring and Global Orientation: A Neo-institutional Theory Perspective on the Contemporary Multinational Corporation | |
Table 1. | Comparing Core Concepts and Underlying Assumptions. |
Table 2. | Comparing Research Foci and Selected Key Research Questions. |
Chapter 5 What the Shared Industry and Country of Origin Bring: Analogous Sequences in The Internationalization of Finnish Paper MNCs | |
Table 1. | The Main Characteristics of the Finnish-Based Paper MNCs Under Study. |
Table 2. | Data Collected on the MNCs Under Study. |
Table 3. | The Main Characteristics of the Internationalization Actions Examined. |
Table 4. | External Constituents and Their Ways of Involvement with the Finnish-Based Paper MNCs. |
Chapter 6 Altered States of Consciousness: MNCs and Ethnographic Studies | |
Table 1. | Ethic and Gender Composition of the Plant Labour Force (2003; Permanent Contracts Only). |
Table 2. | Demographics of Sample Team (Permanent and Temporary Contracts, 2003). |
Chapter 7 Language as a Meeting Ground for Research on the MNC and Organization Theory | |
Table 1. | Multinational and Multilingual Corporations. |
Chapter 8 Headquarter-Subsidiary Relations in the Multinational Corporation as a Discursive Struggle | |
Table 1. | The Levels of the Discursive Struggle in the MNC and Their Key Characteristics. |
Chapter 9 Applying Critical Realism to the MNC: Exploring New Realities in Staffing and Expatriation | |
Table 1. | Chinese Expatriates and Locally Recruited Employees 2011–2013. |
Chapter 10 Headquarters-subsidiary Relationships From a Convention Theory Perspective: Plural Orders of Worth, Arrangements and Form-giving Activities | |
Table 1. | Major Orders of Worth in Organizational Settings. |
Table 2. | Critical Matrix. |
Chapter 12 Gendering The MNC | |
Table 1. | Comparing the Women in Organizations and the Gendered Organization Approaches in the Context of the MNC |
Chapter 13 MNCs and Politicization from Outside | |
Table 1. | Differences between the Industries. |
Chapter 15 Private Governance as Regulatory Substitute or Complement? A Comparative Institutional Approach to CSR Adoption by Multinational Corporations | |
Table 1. | Theoretical Approaches to CSR Adoption in MNCs. |
Table 2. | Sample Distribution by Home Country. |
Table 3. | Subsidiary Locations in Sample by Relative Share. |
Table 4. | Institutional Indicators Used in This Study. |
Table 5. | Correlation Matrix. |
Table 6. | Results of OLS Regression on Human Rights Score. |
List of Contributors
Sharif As-Saber | RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia |
Julia Brandl | University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria |
Mara Brumana | University of Bergamo, Dalmine, Italy |
George Cairns | QUT Business School, Brisbane, Australia |
Stewart Clegg | University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Sydney, Australia; also Visiting Professor at Nova School of Business and Economics, Lisbon, Portugal and Newcastle University Business School, Newcastle, UK |
Giuseppe Delmestri | WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Vienna, Austria |
Christoph Dörrenbächer | Berlin School of Economics and Law, Berlin, Germany |
Gili S. Drori | The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel |
William G. Egelhoff | Fordham University, New York City, NY, USA |
Mats Ehrnrooth | Hanken School of Economics, Vasa, Finland |
Michal Frenkel | The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel |
Mike Geppert | Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany |
Markus A. Höllerer | WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Vienna, Austria, and UNSW Australia Business School, Sydney, Australia |
Gregory Jackson | Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany |
Alexei Koveshnikov | Aalto University, School of Business, Helsinki, Finland |
Juha Laurila | University of Turku, Turku, Finland |
Fiona Moore | Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK |
Rebecca Piekkari | Aalto University, School of Business, Helsinki, Finland |
Nikolas Rathert | Hertie School of Governance, Berlin, Germany |
Chris Rees | Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK |
Anna Schneider | University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria |
Chris Smith | Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK |
Eero Vaara | Aalto University, School of Business, Helsinki, Finland; EMLYON Business School, France; Lancaster University, UK |
Peter Walgenbach | Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany |
D. Eleanor Westney | York University, Ontario, Canada |
Joachim Wolf | Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany |
Sabrina Zajak | Ruhr-University Bochum, Berlin, Germany |
Editorial Advisory Board
SERIES EDITOR
Michael Lounsbury
Canada Research Chair in Entrepreneurship & Innovation, University of Alberta School of Business, Alberta, Canada
ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS
Howard E. Aldrich
University of North Carolina, USA
Christine Beckman
University of Maryland, USA
Jeannette Colyvas
Northwestern University, USA
Barbara Czarniawska
Göteborg University, Sweden
Gerald F. Davis
University of Michigan, USA
Marie-Laure Djelic
ESSEC Business School, France
Frank R. Dobbin
Harvard University, USA
Royston Greenwood
University of Alberta, Canada
Mauro Guillen
The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Paul M. Hirsch
Northwestern University, USA
Candace Jones
University of Edinburgh, UK
Brayden King
Northwestern University, USA
Ann Langley
HEC Montreal, Canada
Renate Meyer
Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration, Austria
Mark Mizruchi
University of Michigan, USA
Nelson Phillips
Imperial College London, UK
Walter W. Powell
Stanford University, USA
Marc Schneiberg
Reed College, USA
W. Richard Scott
Stanford University, USA
Sarah Soule
Stanford University, USA
Haridimos Tsoukas
ALBA, Greece
Eero Vaara
Aalto, Finland
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank all authors and the participants of the paper development workshop (PDW) ‘Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory: Post Millennium Perspectives’ (funded by the Ernst Abbe Foundation) which has been held at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, 19–20 November 2015, for their inspiring insights and the disciplined work on their articles that made this volume possible. Special thanks go to D. Eleanor Westney in particular who has done some truly pioneering work more than 25 years ago, for strongly encouraging and supporting us in taking stock of the post-millennium developments in interdisciplinary OT/IB research on MNCs in this volume. We are also grateful to the series editor Michael Lounsbury, who invited us to be the editors of this volume, Zoe Morris at Emerald, who supported us throughout the editorial process, and to Annika Semper and Kristin Pillmayr, who helped us with the nitty-gritty things of finally putting this volume together and formatting it. Finally, we would like to thank Gerlinde Steinborn and Eva Schlindwein for their support in organising the PDW in 2015.
Preface
Christoph Dörrenbächer and Mike Geppert are to be congratulated in bringing together this new collection of important papers which consider how insights from organization theory (OT) and international business (IB) enrich our understanding of multinational corporations (MNCs). As they rightly recognize in their introductory article, the editors regard this book as updating and taking stock of the OT/IB relationship in a field that has developed considerably following publication in 1993 of the major pioneering volume on the subject, edited by Sumantra Ghoshal and D. Eleanor Westney (1993). Since then, the nature of and scope of MNCs has changed dramatically with the internet, the emergence of “platform” businesses, the spread of global value chains, and the rise of emerging economy multinationals. Relevant theorizing within OT has advanced with awareness of the role within MNCs of identity and understanding in terms of language, discourse and sensemaking, the significance of power relations and conflict, and the influence of the cultural and institutional contexts within which MNCs operate. The field of IB has also broadened its theoretical frameworks beyond a previously heavy reliance on applied economics and, for example, it now recognizes the significance of headquarters-subsidiary relations (not least for effective innovation) and country-of-origin embeddedness. This book ably identifies and discusses these emergent issues and perspectives.
The increasingly critical view many are taking of MNCs today is also reflected in several of the articles in this book. There is considerable disquiet over the negative impact of MNCs on a range of social issues concerning diversity, gender, inequality and the environment. The crisis of confidence in MNCs following the major corporate scandals at the beginning of the millennium has continued to deepen. It raises fundamental questions concerning their appropriate role in contemporary society and the accountability of their leaders. While MNCs have been instrumental throughout the world in raising living standards and satisfying consumer wants (which they have also cleverly stimulated), their leverage in determining how rewards, opportunities, and quality of life are distributed in society has at the same time had negative consequences. The power enjoyed by MNCs is two-edged and not necessarily benign. Critical organization theory recognizes that the multinational corporation encompasses a massive concentration of power, and that this concentration is maintained through organizational structures and processes.
Evidence of the misuse of corporate power undermines the social legitimacy of MNCs as social institutions. It belies the claim that MNCs operate like other institutions for the general good rather than for private sectional interest, and it places on the political agenda questions concerning their governance and the accountability of their leaders. Chomsky (2000), for example, has called corporations “amoral unaccountable, private tyrannies.” The problem of MNCs’ accountability has to be understood with reference to their structure and governance, how they behave in their markets and wider societies, and how these two aspects are related. This book demonstrates that organization theory can offer significant insights into these issues.
Seen from the outside, MNCs may at first sight appear to be tightly controlled monolithic organizations. Research is showing that this is often far from the case. For example, it has raised questions as to how much power MNC corporate HQs and CEOs actually have (and should have) over their subsidiaries. It has become recognized that a degree of subsidiary autonomy is often necessary to enable responsiveness to local conditions and to encourage dispersed sources of innovation. The emergence of MNC global value chains and applications of the “transnational” model (Bartlett & Ghoshal, 2002) have seen a shift towards networked forms of internal MNC organization with varying degrees and forms of coupling between different units (McKern, 2003). Several contributions to this book consider organizational differentiation within MNCs, analyzing in depth how their internal dynamics tend to be characterized by multiple internal discourses, divergent goals, internal tensions, and contrasting identities. MNCs are arenas for lively organizational politics, as was also well demonstrated by a previous contribution of the editors (Dörrenbächer & Geppert, 2011).
Concern about the power wielded by MNCs in contemporary society, and their accountability to governments and stakeholders, highlights the organization of their external relations. Many of their senior executives would claim that the conduct of MNCs is constrained by market forces, government regulation and their own corporate conscience (CSR). This is at odds with the reality as perceived by many observers, including some contributors to this book. In fact, the organization of MNCs’ external relations is informed by a desire to be free of constraints. Typically MNCs endeavor to exercise market power as well as pursuing various non-market strategies of a political nature. Non-market strategies include lobbying and PR, often coupled with an attempt to impose corporate definitions of CSR rather than ones reflecting wider stakeholder interests. As Stewart Clegg observes in his article, “the central business of MNCs is politics by other means.” The relevance of organization theory for an understanding of MNCs’ external relations lies in the fact that these are normally highly organized. Executives take initiatives to construct their MNC’s inter-organizational relations with other firms and with relevant institutions. Thus alliances between MNCs can enhance their market power, while MNCs shape institutional policies to their advantage through consciously managed “relational frameworks” (Child, Tse, & Rodrigues, 2013).
It has been a privilege to read this revealing book. In this short Preface I have been able to touch upon only some of the insights it offers. I can recommend Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory not only to scholars and students working in OT, IB and related fields, but also to anyone wishing to have a better understanding of the MNC as the dominant institution of our time (Bakan, 2004).
John Child
University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
References
Bakan (2004) Bakan, J. (2004). The corporation: The pathological pursuit of profit and power. New York, NY: Free Press.
Bartlett & Ghoshal (2002) Bartlett, C. A. , & Ghoshal, S. (2002). Managing across borders: The transnational solution. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
Child, Tse, & Rodrigues (2013) Child, J. , Tse, K. K-T. , & Rodrigues, S. B. (2013). The dynamics of corporate co-evolution. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Chomsky (2000) Chomsky, N. (2000). Interview with Noam Chomsky, October 4, 2000, Appendix in Bakan (2004).
Dörrenbächer & Geppert (2011) Dörrenbächer, C. , & Geppert, M. (Eds.). (2011). Politics and power in the multinational corporation: The role of institutions, interests and identities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ghoshal & Westney (1993) Ghoshal, S. , & Westney, D. E. (1993). Organization theory and the multinational corporation (2nd ed., 2005). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
McKern (2003) McKern, B. (Ed.). (2003). Managing the global network corporation. London: Routledge.
- Prelims
- Part I: Setting the Scene
- Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory: An Introduction to Post-Millennium Perspectives
- The East India Company: The First Modern Multinational?
- Part II: Further Development of Established Debates
- The Role of Headquarters in the Contemporary MNC: A Contingency Model
- Between Local Mooring and Global Orientation: A Neo-Institutional Theory Perspective on the Contemporary Multinational Corporation
- What the Shared Industry and Country of Origin Bring: Analogous Sequences in the Internationalization of Finnish Paper MNCs
- Altered States of Consciousness: MNCs and Ethnographic Studies
- Part III: New Conceptual and Methodological Approaches in the Study of the MNC
- Language as a Meeting Ground for Research on the MNC and Organization Theory
- Headquarter-Subsidiary Relations in the Multinational Corporation as a Discursive Struggle
- Applying Critical Realism to the MNC: Exploring New Realities in Staffing and Expatriation
- Headquarters-Subsidiary Relationships from a Convention Theory Perspective: Plural Orders of Worth, Arrangements and Form-Giving Activities
- The Multinational Corporation as a Playing Field of Power: A Bourdieusian Approach
- Part IV: The Contemporary MNC: An Internally and Externally Politicized Organization
- Gendering the MNC
- MNCs and Politicization from Outside
- The Dark Side of MNCs
- Private Governance as Regulatory Substitute or Complement? A Comparative Institutional Approach to CSR Adoption by Multinational Corporations
- About the Authors
- Index