Control in complex organizations

Jens Rennstam, Dan Kärreman

Forskningsoutput: Kapitel i bok/rapport/Conference proceedingKonferenspaper i proceedingPeer review

Sammanfattning

The extant research on organizational control builds on the assumption of vertical control – managers are thought to develop orders, rules and norms to control the operating core. Yet it is claimed that work becomes increasingly “knowledge intensive” and that organizations rely heavily for their productivity on the knowledge and creativity of their work force. In this type of “knowledge work,” the strong focus on vertical control is insufficient as it fails to account for the important operative and horizontal interactions upon which many contemporary organizations depend. Drawing on practice theory and an ethnographic study of engineering work, this paper theorizes control as a form of work that does not only belong to formal management, but is dispersed among various work activities, including horizontal ones. The article introduces the idea of control work as a key practice in contemporary organizations, and the concepts of constructive disobedience, translation, and peer reviewing as ways of understanding how control work is exercised at the operative level.
Originalspråkengelska
Titel på värdpublikationAcademy of Management Proceedings
FörlagAcademy of Management
Volym2014
Utgåva1
DOI
StatusPublished - 2014
EvenemangAcademy of Management Conference - Atlanta, USA
Varaktighet: 2006 aug. 1 → …

Konferens

KonferensAcademy of Management Conference
Land/TerritoriumUSA
OrtAtlanta
Period2006/08/01 → …

Ämnesklassifikation (UKÄ)

  • Företagsekonomi

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