Martijn van Ooijen, Antonie van Nistelrooij and Marcel Veenswijk
The purpose of this paper is to expand the theory on multistory cultural change by showing how a dominant narrative on construction safety dynamically interrelates and is…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to expand the theory on multistory cultural change by showing how a dominant narrative on construction safety dynamically interrelates and is contested on multiple intertextual levels in an organizational field of organizations contributing to the recovery of houses in an earthquake region.
Design/methodology/approach
An ethnoventionist research approach was adopted in which interpretation of data to find narratives and designing interventions went hand-in-hand.
Findings
We found four distinctive composite narratives besides the dominant narrative to which five actors refer in their accounts, thereby contributing to three types of story patterns. These narratives disclose the taken-for-granted ideas and beliefs that characterize the challenge of changing organizational culture. One intervention, which intended multiple stories to touch the surface, was highlighted as a multistory intervention.
Research limitations/implications
Further research could extend the knowledge on other change interventions that contribute to multistory cultural change processes.
Originality/value
Adopting an ethnoventionist approach to provide deep insights on an unfolding cultural change process for both scholars and practitioners.