Autopietic decisions approach: a governance research network case study
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explore the autopoietic decisions approach (<Greek: autos=self, poiein=to produce) means self-(re)production and to know the constitution of the governance in the organization of a research network.
Design/methodology/approach
The approach selected was Luhmann's Social System Theory, an autopoietic decisions system. A historical case study was reconstructed in which information was recollected by in-depth interviews and a survey. The network results, the extensive communications submitted by the members of two network congresses (2006 and 2010) were analyzed by networks analysis techniques.
Findings
The approach and model developed were useful to identify the decision premises, which have been the constitutional structure of the research network.
Practical implications
Development of a governance approach useful to a research network organization which retro-feeds the quality movement guidelines.
Originality/value
The quality movement proposes a systematic regulatory approach, via the ISO9000 standard family. This approach has not sufficed for institutions of higher education. One of the reasons is that it favors the “management of things” from a processes standpoint, which conforms to the General Systems Theory. However, the core of higher education is not “things” but rather the “people” participating in it – particularly professors, students, and the university community – who are participating in the creation, teaching, association, and diffusion of knowledge. The unsolved problem refers to governance.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge and appreciate the approval of REMINEO leaders of the case study construction, as well as the cooperation of Alejandro Ruíz in the social network analysis and of Ma. Elena Gómez Cruz in analyzing the data on the pilot test on the satisfaction survey.
Citation
Lobato Calleros, O., Chanlat, A., Bédard, R. and Ramírez, G. (2014), "Autopietic decisions approach: a governance research network case study", The TQM Journal, Vol. 26 No. 4, pp. 382-394. https://doi.org/10.1108/TQM-01-2014-0011
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited