Prelims

Organizing for Societal Grand Challenges

ISBN: 978-1-83909-829-1, eISBN: 978-1-83909-826-0

ISSN: 0733-558X

Publication date: 29 March 2022

Citation

(2022), "Prelims", Gümüsay, A.A., Marti, E., Trittin-Ulbrich, H. and Wickert, C. (Ed.) Organizing for Societal Grand Challenges (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 79), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xx. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0733-558X20220000079026

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Ali Aslan Gümüsay, Emilio Marti, Hannah Trittin-Ulbrich, Christopher Wickert

License

These works are published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial & non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


Half Title Page

ORGANIZING FOR SOCIETAL GRAND CHALLENGES

Series Page

RESEARCH IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF ORGANIZATIONS

Series Editor: Michael Lounsbury

Recent Volumes:

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: Macrofoundations: Exploring the Institutionally 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
Volume 73A: Interdisciplinary Dialogues on Organizational Paradox: Learning from Belief and Science
Volume 73B: Interdisciplinary Dialogues on Organizational Paradox: Investigating Social Structures and Human Expression
Volume 74: Worlds of Rankings
Volume 75: Organizing Creativity in the Innovation Journey
Volume 76: Carnegie goes to California: Advancing and Celebrating the Work of James G. March
Volume 77: The Generation, Recognition and Legitimation of Novelty
Volume 78: The Corporation: Rethinking the Iconic Form of Business Organization
Volume 79: Organizing for Societal Grand Challenges

Series Page

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 - VOLUME 79

ORGANIZING FOR SOCIETAL GRAND CHALLENGES

EDITED BY

ALI ASLAN GÜMÜSAY

University of Hamburg, Germany

Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, Germany

EMILIO MARTI

Erasmus University, Netherlands

HANNAH TRITTIN-ULBRICH

Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany

and

CHRISTOPHER WICKERT

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China

Copyright Page

Emerald Publishing Limited

Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK

First edition 2022

Editorial matter and selection © 2022 Ali Aslan Gümüsay, Emilio Marti, Hannah Trittin-Ulbrich and Christopher Wickert.

Individual chapters © 2022 the respective chapter authors

Published by Emerald Publishing Limited.

These works are published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence.

Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of these works (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-83909-829-1 (Print)

ISBN: 978-1-83909-826-0 (Online)

ISBN: 978-1-83909-828-4 (Epub)

ISSN: 0733-558X (Series)

Open access. Editorial matter and selection © 2022 Ali Aslan Gümüsay, Emilio Marti, Hannah Trittin-Ulbrich and Christopher Wickert. Individual chapters © 2022 the respective chapter authors. Published under exclusive license by Emerald Publishing Limited.

Contents

List of Tables and Figures ix
About the Editors xi
About the Contributors xiii
Foreword xix
How Organizing Matters for Societal Grand Challenges
Ali Aslan Gümüsay, Emilio Marti, Hannah Trittin-Ulbrich and Christopher Wickert 1
Section I: Diverse Forms of Organizing & Societal Grand Challenges
Tackling Grand Challenges Collaboratively: The Role of Value-driven Sensegiving
Arne Kroeger, Nicole Siebold, Franziska Günzel-Jensen, Fouad Philippe Saade and Jukka-Pekka Heikkilä 17
Building Collective Institutional Infrastructures for Decent Platform Work: The Development of a Crowdwork Agreement in Germany
Thomas Gegenhuber, Elke Schuessler, Georg Reischauer and Laura Thäter 43
Theorizing the Role of Metaphors in Co-orienting Collective Action Toward Grand Challenges: The Example of the Covid-19 Pandemic
Dennis Schoeneborn, Consuelo Vásquez and Joep P. Cornelissen 69
Wicked Problems and New Ways of Organizing: How Fe y Alegria Confronted Changing Manifestations of Poverty
Camilo Arciniegas Pradilla, Jose Bento da Silva and Juliane Reinecke 93
From a Clash of Social Orders to a Loss of Decidability in Meta-organizations Tackling Grand Challenges: The Case of Japan Leaving the International Whaling Commission
Héloïse Berkowitz and Michael Grothe-Hammer 115
Commitment to Grand Challenges in Fluid Forms of Organizing: The Role of Narratives’ Temporality
Iben Sandal Stjerne, Matthias Wenzel and Silviya Svejenova 139
Section II: Scholarship & Societal Grand Challenges
Addressing Grand Challenges Through Different Forms of Organizing: A Literature Review
Leo Juri Kaufmann and Anja Danner-Schröder 163
Scale in Research on Grand Challenges
Katharina Dittrich 187
Diaries as a Methodological Innovation for Studying Grand Challenges
Madeleine Rauch and Shahzad (Shaz) Ansari 205
Grand Challenges and Business Education: Dealing with Barriers to Learning and Uncomfortable Knowledge
Marian Konstantin Gatzweiler, Corinna Frey-Heger and Matteo Ronzani 221
Striving for Societal Impact as an Early-Career Researcher: Reflections on Five Common Concerns
Sascha Friesike, Leonhard Dobusch and Maximilian Heimstädt 239
Section III: Reflections & Outlook
Robust Action: Advancing a Distinctive Approach to Grand Challenges
Joel Gehman, Dror Etzion and Fabrizio Ferraro 259
Surfing the Grand Challenges Wave in Management Scholarship: How Did We Get Here, Where Are We Now, and What’s Next?
Jennifer Howard-Grenville and Jonas Spengler 279

List of Tables and figures

Tables
Introduction
Table 1. Papers in This Volume. 4
Chapter 1
Table 1. Data Sources. 21
Table 2. Dimensions, Themes, Categories, and Quotes. 26
Chapter 2
Table 1. Case Database. 50
Chapter 4
Table 1. Characterizing Poverty Using Rittel and Webber’s Dimensions of Wicked Problems. 100
Table 2. Data Analysis. 103
Chapter 5
Table 1. Types of Sources. 124
Table 2. IWC Key Social Order’s History Timeline. 126
Chapter 6
Table 1. Narratives, Temporality, and Commitment to Grand Challenges in Fluid Forms of Organizing. 150
Chapter 7
Table 1. Overview of Organizational Forms. 168
Chapter 8
Table 1. Scale in Research on Grand Challenges. 199
Chapter 9
Table 1. Overview Diaries. 209
Table 2. Questions to Consider When Working with Diaries. 212
Chapter 12
Table 1. Analytic Facets of Grand Challenges. 261
Table 2. Robust Action Strategies. 263
Figures
Chapter 1
Fig. 1. Data Structure. 24
Fig. 2. Model of Value-driven Sensegiving, Change in Sensemaking and Joint Action. 25
Fig. 3. A Conceptual Model of the Relevance of Values for Initiating Joint Action. 36
Chapter 2
Fig. 1. The Role of Templates in the Creation of a Collective Institutional Infrastructure. 59
Chapter 4
Fig. 1. Organizing for Gaps Between Policies and Practices: Dynamic Complexity of Wicked Problems. 109
Chapter 5
Fig. 1. Evolution of Orders in the Meta-organization. 131
Chapter 7
Fig. 1. Process Model of Addressing Grand Challenges Through Different Organizational Forms. 181
Chapter 11
Fig. 1. Heroic, Non-heroic and Post-heroic Perspective on Societal Impact. 252
Chapter 13
Fig. 1. Framework for Addressing Grand Challenges. 283
Fig. 2. Articles Citing George et al. (2016) by Number of Times That Invoked the Term “Grand Challenges.” 292

About the Editors

Ali Aslan Gümüsay is a Senior Researcher at University of Hamburg and the Head of research group “Innovation, Entrepreneurship & Society” at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet & Society Berlin. His work on values, meaning, & hybridity in entrepreneurial settings; grand challenges, innovation, & new forms of organizing; societal complexity & engaged scholarship; and digitalization & the future of work/leadership has been published in outlets such as Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Perspectives, Business & Society, Journal of Business Ethics, Journal of Management Studies, Organization Theory, Research in the Sociology of Organizations, and Research Policy.

Emilio Marti is an Assistant Professor at the Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, and part of the Erasmus Initiative “Dynamics of Inclusive Prosperity.” His main research interest is to explore how different types of shareholders – from sustainable investors to activist hedge funds – influence corporate sustainability. His research has been published in outlets such as Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, and Journal of Management Studies.

Hannah Trittin-Ulbrich is an Assistant Professor for Business Ethics at Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany. Her research interests include corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainability, corporate digital responsibility (CDR), CSR communication, diversity management, digitalization, stakeholder engagement, as well as new forms of work and organizing. Her research has been published in outlets such as Journal of Management Studies, Journal of Business Ethics, Organization, and Journal of Management Inquiry.

Christopher Wickert is an Associate Professor in Ethics and Sustainability at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU), Netherlands. His research interests include corporate social responsibility (CSR), sustainability, business & society, social entrepreneurship, and organizational theory. His research has appeared in outlets such as Journal of Management Studies, Organization Studies, Academy of Management Discoveries, Human Relation, Business & Society, and Journal of Business Ethics. He is the Founding Director of the VU Center for Business & Society (www.business-society.org) and an Associate Editor at the Journal of Management Studies.

About the Contributors

Shahzad (Shaz) Ansari is a Professor of Strategy and Innovation at Judge Business School, University of Cambridge. He serves on the Editorial Boards of leading FT50 Journals. His research interests include social and environmental issues, frames and framing, social movements, technology and innovation management, platforms, commons, temporality, institutional change and diffusion.

Héloïse Berkowitz is a CNRS Researcher at LEST, Aix Marseille University. She works on sustainability transitions and new ways of organizing, in particular meta-organizations. She has a PhD in Management from Ecole Polytechnique and graduated from Paris Sorbonne, HEC Paris and CEMS Alliance. She is a Co-editor in Chief of the open access journal M@n@gement.

Joep P. Cornelissen is a Professor of Corporate Communication at Rotterdam School of Management in the Netherlands and Chair in Strategy and Organization (part-time) at Liverpool University Management School, United Kingdom. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Organization Theory.

Anja Danner-Schröder is an Associate Professor for Management Studies at the Department of Business Studies and Economics at the University of Kaiserslautern. Her research focuses on the dynamics of organizational routines, temporal dimensions of organizing and novel forms of coordinating and organizing including the use of digital technologies.

Katharina Dittrich is an Associate Professor of Organization Studies in the Organisation and Work Group at Warwick Business School, UK. Her research interests include routine dynamics and strategy, with an emphasis on practice-theoretical approaches and qualitative research methods. She explores these dynamics in the context of climate-related risks in the financial investment industry.

Leonhard Dobusch is a Professor of Business Administration with focus on Organization at the University of Innsbruck and Academic Director of the Momentum Institute in Vienna, Austria. His research interests include the organizational openness, management of digital communities and private regulation via standards, specifically in the field of intellectual property.

Dror Etzion is an Associate Professor of Strategy and Organization at the Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, and an Associate Member of the Bieler School of Environment. His research program focuses on grand challenges: the unyielding, intractable problems that characterize the Anthropocene.

Fabrizio Ferraro is a Professor of Strategic Management at IESE Business School, Barcelona, Spain. His current research explores the global rise of ESG and Impact Investing. More broadly, he is interested in understanding how robust action can enable deliberative process among actors and help them tackle grand challenges.

Corinna Frey-Heger is an Assistant Professor at the Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University. She seeks to understand new forms of organizing in the context of today’s grand challenges and global crisis and is particularly interested in how well-intended responses to such challenges may intensify the very problems they are meant to solve.

Sascha Friesike is a Professor of Digital Innovation Design at the Berlin University of the Arts and Director of the Weizenbaum Institute. He is also an Associate Researcher at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute. In his research, he focuses on the role digital technologies play when something new is created.

Marian Konstantin Gatzweiler is a Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh Business School. Marian’s research mainly focuses on the intersection of organizing and technologies of calculation in high-performance settings. His field work includes research on management practices in large-scale humanitarian crises and Europe’s largest megaproject.

Thomas Gegenhuber is a Professor for the Management of Socio-Technical Transitions at JKU Linz. Thomas researches digital forms of organizing such as crowdsourcing or platforms. Thomas’ work appears in international journals such as Human Relations, Long Range Planning, Business & Society, and Information & Organization.

Joel Gehman is a Professor of Strategic Management & Public Policy and Lindner-Gambal Chair in Business Ethics at the George Washington University. His research examines strategic, technological, and institutional responses to grand challenges related to sustainability and values concerns.

Michael Grothe-Hammer is an Associate Professor of Sociology (Organization and Technology) in the Department of Sociology and Political Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Norway. His research interests include new forms of organization, decision-based theories of organization, and macro-societal differentiation.

Franziska Günzel-Jensen is an Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship at Aarhus University. Her research focuses on entrepreneurship and innovation as a vehicle to address societal grand challenges and achieve the UN SDG agenda.

Jukka-Pekka Heikkilä is a Scholar-Activist at Aalto University School of Business, and visiting scholar Stanford University and Harvard University. His research interests circle around participatory organizing and entrepreneurship to bridge science and practice.

Maximilian Heimstädt is a Senior Lecturer at Bielefeld University and the Head of the research group “Reorganizing Knowledge Practices” at Weizenbaum Institute in Berlin. He draws on analytic sensibilities from organization studies, sociology and science & technology studies to explore the changing nature of expert work in digitally networked environments.

Jennifer Howard-Grenville is the Diageo Professor in Organization Studies at the Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge (UK). She conducts qualitative research focused on how people generate change related to sustainability. Through editorial work and essays, she aims to support rigorous engagement of management scholarship with societal grand challenges.

Leo Juri Kaufmann is a doctoral student at the Department of Business Studies and Economics at the University of Kaiserslautern. His research focuses on the dynamics of coordinating, new forms of organizing and climate change. His current research project is analyzing coordinating mechanisms of Fridays for Future.

Arne Kroeger is an Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship at Aalto University School of Business. His research interests circle around social entrepreneurship, impact investing, and societal grand challenges.

Camilo Arciniegas Pradilla is an Assistant Professor at the University of Tolima, Colombia, in the Management and Marketing Department. His research consists of explaining how temporality and diverse notions of time influence the understanding of the past and future phenomena in organizations.

Madeleine Rauch is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Strategy and Innovation at Copenhagen Business School and a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University. Madeleine conducts research in extreme contexts and challenges faced by people both working and living in difficult contexts, such as war-torn areas like Afghanistan, Iraq and Yemen.

Juliane Reinecke is a Professor of International Management and Sustainability at King’s Business School, King’s College London, UK, and Research Fellow at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, from where she received her PhD. Her research interests focus on global governance for wicked problems, temporality, sustainability, and social movements.

Georg Reischauer studies digital strategy, digital organization, and digital sustainability at WU Vienna University of Economics and Business as well as at Johannes Kepler University Linz.

Matteo Ronzani is a Lecturer at Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester. Matteo studies the effects of performance measurement practices on organizations and society. His interdisciplinary work draws from the sociology of quantification, accounting, and organization theory, and focuses primarily on understanding how technologies of calculation can be mobilized to address grand challenges.

Fouad Philippe Saade is a Doctoral Researcher at Hanken School of Economics, and an experienced family-business entrepreneur. His research focuses on entrepreneurship education and migrant entrepreneurship.

Dennis Schoeneborn is a Professor of Communication, Organization, and CSR at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark, and a Visiting Professor of Organization Studies at Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany. He is a Co-editor (with Markus Reihlen) of the forthcoming Springer Handbook on the Epistemology of Management. He furthermore serves as an Associate Editor at Business and Society.

Elke Schuessler is a Full Professor of Business Administration and the Head of the Institute of Organization Science at Johannes Kepler University Linz. Her research focuses on social challenges such as climate change, decent work or digitalization as well as different forms of organizing that enable creativity, innovation, and change.

Nicole Siebold is an Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship at Aarhus University. Her research focuses on social entrepreneurship, social venture growth, and social impact.

Jose Bento da Silva is an Assistant Professor at Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, UK. Jose’s research is centered on how ambiguity, mystery, temporality, the ineffable and categories deemed “irrational” can foster our understanding of social and institutional order(ing). This theoretical interest has driven Jose’s historical and ethnographic research on large-scale religious and social organizations.

Jonas Spengler is a PhD candidate in Organization Theory at the Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge (UK). Jonas conducts research on activism within corporations and volunteering in extreme contexts, such as refugee camps.

Iben Sandal Stjerne, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Organization at Copenhagen Business School. Her primary research focus sits at the intersection of temporality, transient forms of organizing, and Human Resource Management.

Silviya Svejenova, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. She is a Professor in Leadership & Innovation in the Department of Organization at Copenhagen Business School. Her research focuses on multimodal and temporal aspects of creativity, innovation, space, and place.

Laura Thäter is currently a Research Assistant at the Hertie School of Governance. Her research field is organization theory, with a particular interest in new forms of organizing and the platform economy.

Consuelo Vásquez is an Associate Professor in the Département de Communication at UQAM, Canada. Her research focuses on the communicative constitution of organization, organizational ethnography and fragile organizations. She is the Co-founder of the Research Group Communication and Organizing (ReCOr) and the Latin-American Network of Organizational Communication Research (RedLAco).

Matthias Wenzel, Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany. He is a Professor of Organization Studies at the Leuphana University of Lüneburg. His research focuses on the processes and practices through which the interplay between strategy and organization is produced and recreated.

Foreword: Research in the Sociology of Organizations

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 multi-national conglomerates to international governing bodies such as the United Nations.

Empirical topics addressed by Research in the Sociology of Organizations 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 multi-level 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, Research in the Sociology of Organizations 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 Research in the Sociology of Organizations 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, 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 Research in the Sociology of Organizations 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
How Organizing Matters for Societal Grand Challenges
Section I: Diverse Forms of Organizing & Societal Grand Challenges
Tackling Grand Challenges Collaboratively: The Role of Value-driven Sensegiving
Building Collective Institutional Infrastructures for Decent Platform Work: The Development of a Crowdwork Agreement in Germany
Theorizing the Role of Metaphors in Co-orienting Collective Action Toward Grand Challenges: The Example of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Wicked Problems and New Ways of Organizing: How Fe y Alegria Confronted Changing Manifestations of Poverty
From a Clash of Social Orders to a Loss of Decidability in Meta-organizations Tackling Grand Challenges: The Case of Japan Leaving the International Whaling Commission
Commitment to Grand Challenges in Fluid Forms of Organizing: The Role of Narratives’ Temporality
Section II: Scholarship & Societal Grand Challenges
Addressing Grand Challenges Through Different Forms of Organizing: A Literature Review
Scale in Research on Grand Challenges
Diaries as a Methodological Innovation for Studying Grand Challenges
Grand Challenges and Business Education: Dealing with Barriers to Learning and Uncomfortable Knowledge
Striving for Societal Impact as an Early-career Researcher: Reflections on Five Common Concerns
Section III: Reflections & Outlook
Robust Action: Advancing a Distinctive Approach to Grand Challenges
Surfing the Grand Challenges Wave in Management Scholarship: How Did We Get Here, Where are We Now, and What's Next?