Prelims
Interdisciplinary Dialogues on Organizational Paradox: Learning from Belief and Science, Part A
ISBN: 978-1-80117-184-7, eISBN: 978-1-80117-183-0
ISSN: 0733-558X
Publication date: 8 July 2021
Citation
(2021), "Prelims", Bednarek, R., e Cunha, M.P., Schad, J. and Smith, W.K. (Ed.) Interdisciplinary Dialogues on Organizational Paradox: Learning from Belief and Science, Part A (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 73a), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxii. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0733-558X2021000073a018
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
INTERDISCIPLINARY DIALOGUES ON ORGANIZATIONAL PARADOX
Series Page
RESEARCH IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZATIONS
Series Editor: Michael Lounsbury
Recent Volumes:
Volume 47: | The Structuring of Work in Organizations |
Volume 48A: | How Institutions Matter! |
Volume 48B: | How Institutions Matter! |
Volume 49: | Multinational Corporations and Organization Theory: Post Millennium Perspectives |
Volume 50: | Emergence |
Volume 51: | Categories, Categorization and Categorizing: Category Studies in Sociology, Organizations and Strategy at the Crossroads |
Volume 52: | Justification, Evaluation and Critique in the Study of Organizations: Contributions from French Pragmatist Sociology |
Volume 53: | Structure, Content and Meaning of Organizational Networks: Extending Network Thinking |
Volume 54A: | Multimodality, Meaning, and Institutions |
Volume 54B: | Multimodality, Meaning, and Institutions |
Volume 55: | Social Movements, Stakeholders and Non-market Strategy |
Volume 56: | Social Movements, Stakeholders and Non-market Strategy |
Volume 57: | Toward Permeable Boundaries of Organizations? |
Volume 58: | Agents, Actors, Actorhood: Institutional Perspectives on the Nature of Agency, Action, and Authority |
Volume 59: | The Production of Managerial Knowledge and Organizational Theory: New Approaches to Writing, Producing and Consuming Theory |
Volume 60: | Race, Organizations, and the Organizing Process |
Volume 61: | Routine Dynamics in Action |
Volume 62: | Thinking Infrastructures |
Volume 63: | The Contested Moralities of Markets |
Volume 64: | Managing Inter-organizational Collaborations: Process Views |
Volume 65A: | Microfoundations of Institutions |
Volume 65B: | Microfoundations of Institutions |
Volume 66: | Theorizing the Sharing Economy: Variety and Trajectories of New Forms of Organizing |
Volume 67: | Tensions and Paradoxes in Temporary Organizing |
Volume 68: | Macro Foundations: Exploring the Situated Nature of Activity |
Volume 69: | Organizational Hybridity: Perspectives, Processes, Promises |
Volume 70: | On Practice and Institution: Theorizing the Interface |
Volume 71: | On Practice and Institution: New Empirical Directions |
Volume 72: | Organizational Imaginaries: Tempering Capitalism and Tending to Communities through Cooperatives and Collectivist Democracy |
Advisory Board
Research in the Sociology of Organizations Advisory Board
Series Editor
Michael Lounsbury
Professor of Strategic Management & Organization
Canada Research Chair in Entrepreneurship & Innovation University of Alberta School of Business
RSO Advisory Board
Howard E. Aldrich, University of North Carolina, USA
Shaz Ansari, Cambridge University, UNITED KINGDOM
Silvia Dorado Banacloche, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA
Christine Beckman, University of Southern California, USA
Marya Besharov, Oxford University, UNITED KINGDOM
Eva Boxenbaum, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Ed Carberry, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA
Lisa Cohen, McGill University, CANADA
Jeannette Colyvas, Northwestern University, USA
Erica Coslor, University of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Gerald F. Davis, University of Michigan, USA
Rich Dejordy, California State University, USA
Rodolphe Durand, HEC Paris, FRANCE
Fabrizio Ferraro, IESE Business School, SPAIN
Peer Fiss, University of Southern California, USA
Mary Ann Glynn, Boston College, USA
Nina Granqvist, Aalto University School of Business, FINLAND
Royston Greenwood, University of Alberta, CANADA
Stine Grodal, Northeastern University, USA
Markus A. Hoellerer, University of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA
Ruthanne Huising, emlyon business school, FRANCE
Candace Jones, University of Edinburgh, UNITED KINGDOM
Sarah Kaplan, University of Toronto, CANADA
Brayden G. King, Northwestern University, USA
Matthew S. Kraatz, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Tom Lawrence, Oxford University, UNITED KINGDOM
Xiaowei Rose Luo, Insead, FRANCE
Johanna Mair, Hertie School, GERMANY
Christopher Marquis, Cornell University, USA
Renate Meyer, Vienna University, AUSTRIA
William Ocasio, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Nelson Phillips, Imperial College London, UNITED KINGDOM
Prateek Raj, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore, INDIA
Marc Schneiberg, Reed College, USA
Marc-David Seidel, University of British Columbia, CANADA
Paul Spee, University of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Paul Tracey, Cambridge University, UNITED KINGDOM
Kerstin Sahlin, Uppsala University, SWEDEN
Sarah Soule, Stanford University, USA
Eero Vaara, University of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
Marc Ventresca, University of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
Maxim Voronov, York University, CANADA
Filippo Carlo Wezel USI Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Melissa Wooten, Rutgers University, USA
April Wright, University of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Meng Zhao, Nanyang Business School & Renmin University, CHINA
Enying Zheng, Peking University, CHINA
Tammar B. Zilber, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, ISRAEL
Title Page
RESEARCH IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZATIONS PART 73A
Interdisciplinary Dialogues on Organizational Paradox: Learning from Belief and Science, Part A
EDITED BY
REBECCA BEDNAREK
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
MIGUEL PINA E CUNHA
Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
JONATHAN SCHAD
King’s College London, UK
AND
WENDY K. SMITH
University of Delaware, USA
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2021
Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited
Reprints and permissions service
Contact: permissions@emeraldinsight.com
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. Any opinions expressed in the chapters are those of the authors. Whilst Emerald makes every effort to ensure the quality and accuracy of its content, Emerald makes no representation implied or otherwise, as to the chapters’ suitability and application and disclaims any warranties, express or implied, to their use.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-80117-184-7 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-80117-183-0 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-80043-410-3 (Epub)
ISSN: 0733-558X (Series)
Contents
About the Editors | ix |
About the Contributors | xi |
List of Figures | xv |
List of Tables | xvii |
List of Contributors | xix |
Foreword | xxi |
Introduction A | |
The Value of Interdisciplinary Research to Advance Paradox in Organization Theory | |
Rebecca Bednarek, Miguel Pina e Cunha, Jonathan Schad and Wendy Smith | 3 |
A1. Realm of Beliefs | |
Paradox beyond East/West Orthodoxy: The Case of Ubuntu | |
Medhanie Gaim and Stewart Clegg | 29 |
The Meta-perspective of Yin-Yang Balancing: Salient Implications for Organizational Management | |
Peter Ping Li | 51 |
Where We Might Least Expect to Find It: Organizing Paradoxes of Christian Theology in a Society of Organizations | |
Mathew L. Sheep | 75 |
Crossing Boundaries: Connecting Religion and Paradox for Leadership and Organization Research | |
Ali Aslan Gümüsay | 95 |
Commentary: Paradoxical Dimensions of Religious Experience | |
Jean M. Bartunek and Mary Frohlich | 113 |
A2. Realm of Physical Systems | |
Paradox and Quantum Mechanics: Implications for the Management of Organizational Paradox from a Quantum Approach | |
Eric Knight and Tobias Hahn | 129 |
Planetary Emergency and Paradox | |
Amanda Williams, Katrin Heucher and Gail Whiteman | 151 |
Digitally Induced Industry Paradoxes: Disruptive Innovations of Taxiwork and Music Streaming beyond Organizational Boundaries | |
David Tilson, Carsten S⊘rensen and Kalle Lyytinen | 171 |
Commentary: Strategies for Studying How Contradictions Unfold | |
Andrew H. Van de Ven | 193 |
Index | 203 |
About the Editors
Rebecca Bednarek is an Associate Professor at Victoria University of Wellington. She studies paradoxes and strategizing practices and has written extensively about qualitative methods. She has co-authored a research-monograph “Making a Market for Acts of God” published by Oxford University Press.
Miguel Pina e Cunha is the Fundação Amélia de Mello Professor of Leadership and Organization at Nova School of Business and Economics, Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Portugal). He studies organizational as process and paradox. He recently coauthored Elgar Introduction to Organizational Paradox Theory (Edward Elgar) and Paradoxes of Power and Leadership (Routledge).
Jonathan Schad is an Assistant Professor (‘Lecturer’) in Strategy and Organisation Theory at King’s College London, UK and an Academic Fellow of the University of Geneva, Switzerland. His research uses paradox theory to better understand the fundamental tensions contemporary organizations confront.
Wendy K. Smith is Professor and Deutsch Family Fellow at University of Delaware, USA. She explores how leaders navigate strategic paradoxes, such as tensions between exploration and exploitation or social missions and financial demands. Wendy co-edited the Oxford Handbook of Organizational Paradox. She is recognized by the Web of Science for being among the top 1% of most cited scholars in 2019 and 2020.
About the Contributors
Jean M. Bartunek holds the Ferris Chair and is a Professor of Management and Organization at Boston College, USA. She is a past President of the Academy of Management and past Dean of the Fellows of the Academy of Management. Her scholarly interests concern organizational change and academic–practitioner relationships.
Stewart Clegg, recently retired from the University of Stavanger Business School, Norway and Nova School of Business and Economics, is recognized in several fields in the social sciences for his work in organization studies and on power. He is a Prolific Writer and Contributor to journals and has also produced a large number of books, gaining several awards of note.
Mary Frohlich is a Professor of Spirituality at the Catholic Theological Union, USA. She is a past President of the Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality and is a noted scholar of Carmelite spirituality. Her research interests include contributions of the physical and human sciences to insight into spiritual transformation.
Medhanie Gaim is an Associate Professor of Management at Umeå School of Business, Economics, and Statistics, Sweden. His research focuses predominantly on paradox theory and on entrepreneurial ecosystems and new venture creation. His research has been published in journals such as Academy of Management Review, Organization Studies, and Research in the Sociology of Organizations.
Ali Aslan Gümüsay is a Senior Researcher at Universität Hamburg and Head of Research Group at the Humboldt Institute for Internet & Society. He works on values, meaning, and hybridity in entrepreneurial settings; grand challenges, innovation, and new forms of organizing; societal complexity and engaged scholarship; and digitalization, AI, and leadership.
Tobias Hahn is a Professor of Sustainability at Esade Business School in Barcelona, Spain. He has published on paradoxes and tensions in sustainability, sustainability strategies, stakeholder behavior, and sustainable performance assessment. His research has appeared in journals such as Academy of Management Review, Organization Studies, Journal of Business Ethics, and Business & Society.
Katrin Heucher is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Erb Institute, University of Michigan. She received her PhD from Loughborough University, UK. Her research lies at the intersection of sustainability management and organization studies. She uses qualitative methods such as organizational ethnography to study processes around corporate sustainability and paradox.
Eric Knight is Executive Dean and a Professor of Strategic Management at Macquarie Business School, Macquarie University, Australia. He has published on paradoxes and organizational strategy, with a particular interest in a social practices approach. His research has appeared in journals such as Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, Organization Studies, and Human Relations.
Kalle Lyytinen is a Distinguished University Professor and Iris S. Wolstein Professor of Management Design at Case Western Reserve University, and a Distinguished Visiting Professor at Aalto University, Finland (Industrial and Engineering Management). He is among the top five IS scholars in terms of his h-index (92). He has published over 400 refereed articles and edited or written over 30 books or special issues.
Peter Ping Li is Li Dak Sum Chair Professor of International Business at the University of Nottingham at Ningbo, China, and Professor of Chinese Business Studies at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. As a thought leader about indigenous management and emerging multinationals, his primary research focuses on building geocentric (West-meeting-East) theories.
Mathew L. Sheep is an Associate Dean in the Lutgert College of Business. His research focuses on discursive perspectives of paradox and identity. He served as Associate Editor for Human Relations 2012–2019 and continues to serve on its Editorial Board.
Carsten S⊘rensen is a Reader (Associate Professor) in Digital Innovation at The London School of Economics and Political Science’s Department of Management. He has published in all the major Information Systems journals, managed large research grants, and consulted enterprises on issues related to the digital transformation of business.
David Tilson is a Clinical Professor of Information Systems and Analytics at the University of Rochester’s Simon Business School. His research primarily explores digital infrastructures and platforms. In other research streams he has explored technical standards, mobile computing, and improving operational efficiency in healthcare settings.
Andrew H. Van de Ven is a Professor Emeritus in the Carlson School of the University of Minnesota. His research has dealt with the Nominal Group Technique, organization design and assessment, inter-organizational relationships, organizational innovation, change and paradox, and engaged scholarship research methods. During 2000–2001 he was President of the Academy of Management, and he was Founding Editor of Academy of Management Discoveries (2012–2017).
Gail Whiteman is a Professor-in-Residence at the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and Professor of Sustainability at the University of Exeter Business School, UK. Her research analyzes how actors make sense of complex problems and build resilience across scales. She is the Founder of Arctic Basecamp, a science-solutions communication platform at the World Economic Forum.
Amanda Williams is a Senior Researcher at ETH Zurich, Switzerland in the Group for Sustainability and Technology. She received her PhD from Rotterdam School of Management, the Netherlands. Her research focuses on corporate sustainability, social-ecological systems, and resilience.
List of Figures
Chapter 1 | Fig. 1.1. | The Interrelated Features of Ubuntu. | 38 |
Chapter 2 | Fig. 2.1. | The Structures of Yin-Yang Balancing with Black, White and Gray Areas. | 63 |
Fig. 2.2. | The Holistic and Dynamic Process of Yin-Yang Balancing with the Stages and Thresholds at Multiple Levels for Structural Changes. | 65 | |
Chapter 4 | Fig. 4.1. | Expanding Outer Boundaries. | 101 |
Fig. 4.2. | Dynamizing Inner Boundaries. | 105 | |
Fig. 4.3. | Shifting Boundaries. | 106 | |
Chapter 6 | Fig. 6.1. | The Planetary Boundaries Framework. | 154 |
Fig. 6.2a. | Nested Systems Perspective of the Planetary Emergency with Inherent Paradoxes Across Economic, Social, and Environmental Dimensions. | 158 | |
Fig. 6.2b. | Salient Shock Related to the Planetary Emergency with Latent Issues in the Background. | 160 | |
Fig. 6.2c. | A Series of Shocks Related to the Planetary Emergency Over Time. | 161 | |
Fig. 6.3. | A Framework for Navigating Paradoxical Tensions under Planetary Emergency Conditions. | 163 | |
Commentary 2 | Fig. C2.1. | Approaches to Managing Contradiction. | 197 |
List of Tables
Introduction | Table I.1. | The Realm of Belief to Inform Paradox Theory. | 11 |
Table I.2. | The Realm of Physical Systems to Inform Paradox Theory. | 13 | |
Table I.3. | The Realm of Social Structures to Inform Paradox Theory. | 15 | |
Table I.4 | The Realm of Expression to Inform Paradox Theory. | 17 | |
Chapter 1 | Table 1.1. | Key Features and Differences in Approach. | 40 |
Chapter 2 | Table 2.1. | The Similarities and Distinctions Between Three Core Epistemological Systems. | 58 |
Table 2.2. | The Three Systems for Paradox Management with Selected Illustrations. | 59 | |
Commentary 1 | Table C1.1. | Treatments of Religion-related Paradox. | 121 |
Chapter 5 | Table 5.1. | Different Management Approaches to Organizational Paradox. | 145 |
List of Contributors
Jean M. Bartunek | Boston College, USA |
Rebecca Bednarek | Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand |
Stewart Clegg | University of Stavanger, Norway and Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal |
Mary Frohlich | Catholic Theological Union, USA |
Medhanie Gaim | Umeå University, Sweden |
Ali Aslan Gümüsay | Universität Hamburg, Germany |
Tobias Hahn | Universitat Ramon Llull, Esade Business School, Spain |
Katrin Heucher | University of Michigan, USA |
Eric Knight | Macquarie University, Australia |
Kalle Lyytinen | Case Western Reserve University, USA |
Miguel Pina e Cunha | Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal |
Peter Ping Li | University of Nottingham at Ningbo, China |
Jonathan Schad | King’s College London, UK |
Mathew L. Sheep | Florida Gulf Coast University USA |
Wendy Smith | University of Delaware, USA |
Carsten S⊘rensen | London School of Economics and Political Science, UK |
David Tilson | University of Rochester, USA |
Andrew H. Van de Ven | University of Minnesota, USA |
Gail Whiteman | University of Exeter, UK |
Amanda Williams | ETH Zurich, Switzerland |
Foreword
Research in the Sociology of Organizations (RSO) publishes cutting edge empirical research and theoretical papers that seek to enhance our understanding of organizations and organizing as pervasive and fundamental aspects of society and economy. We seek provocative papers that push the frontiers of current conversations, that help to revive old ones, or that incubate and develop new perspectives. Given its successes in this regard, RSO has become an impactful and indispensable fount of knowledge for scholars interested in organizational phenomena and theories. RSO is indexed and ranks highly in Scopus/SCImago as well as in the Academic Journal Guide published by the Chartered Association of Business schools.
As one of the most vibrant areas in the social sciences, the sociology of organizations engages a plurality of empirical and theoretical approaches to enhance our understanding of the varied imperatives and challenges that these organizations and their organizers face. Of course, there is a diversity of formal and informal organizations – from for-profit entities to non-profits, state and public agencies, social enterprises, communal forms of organizing, non-governmental associations, trade associations, publicly traded, family owned and managed, private firms – the list goes on! Organizations, moreover, can vary dramatically in size from small entrepreneurial ventures to large multinational conglomerates to international governing bodies such as the United Nations.
Empirical topics addressed by RSO include: the formation, survival, and growth or organizations; collaboration and competition between organizations; the accumulation and management of resources and legitimacy; and how organizations or organizing efforts cope with a multitude of internal and external challenges and pressures. Particular interest is growing in the complexities of contemporary organizations as they cope with changing social expectations and as they seek to address societal problems related to corporate social responsibility, inequality, corruption and wrongdoing, and the challenge of new technologies. As a result, levels of analysis reach from the individual, to the organization, industry, community and field, and even the nation-state or world society. Much research is multilevel and embraces both qualitative and quantitative forms of data.
Diverse theory is employed or constructed to enhance our understanding of these topics. While anchored in the discipline of sociology and the field of management, RSO also welcomes theoretical engagement that draws on other disciplinary conversations – such as those in political science or economics, as well as work from diverse philosophical traditions. RSO scholarship has helped push forward a plethora theoretical conversations on institutions and institutional change, networks, practice, culture, power, inequality, social movements, categories, routines, organization design and change, configurational dynamics and many other topics.
Each volume of RSO tends to be thematically focused on a particular empirical phenomenon (e.g., creative industries, multinational corporations, entrepreneurship) or theoretical conversation (e.g., institutional logics, actors and agency, and microfoundations). The series publishes papers by junior as well as leading international scholars, and embraces diversity on all dimensions. If you are scholar interested in organizations or organizing, I hope you find RSO to be an invaluable resource as you develop your work.
Professor Michael Lounsbury
Series Editor, Research in the Sociology of Organizations
Canada Research Chair in Entrepreneurship & Innovation
University of Alberta
- Prelims
- Introduction A
- The Value of Interdisciplinary Research to Advance Paradox in Organization Theory
- A1. Realm of Beliefs
- Paradox Beyond East/West Orthodoxy: The case of Ubuntu
- The Meta-Perspective of Yin-Yang Balancing: Salient Implications for Organizational Management
- Where We Might Least Expect to Find It: Organizing Paradoxes of Christian Theology in a Society of Organizations
- Crossing Boundaries: Connecting Religion and Paradox for Leadership and Organization Research
- Commentary: Paradoxical Dimensions of Religious Experience
- A2. Realm of Physical Systems
- Paradox and Quantum Mechanics: Implications for the Management of Organizational Paradox from a Quantum Approach
- Planetary Emergency and Paradox
- Digitally Induced Industry Paradoxes: Disruptive Innovations of Taxiwork and Music Streaming Beyond Organizational Boundaries
- Commentary: Strategies for Studying How Contradictions Unfold
- Index