
The Institutional Logics Perspective A New Approach to Culture, Structure and Process
by Thornton, Patricia H.; Ocasio, William; Lounsbury, Michael-
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Summary
Author Biography
Patricia H. Thornton is Adjunct Professor affiliated with the Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Duke University Fuqua School of Business and affiliated faculty to the Program on Organizations, Business, and the Economy, Department of Sociology, Stanford University. Her research focuses on institutional and organizational change, innovation and entrepreneurship, and institutional logics and strategic management. Her book, Markets from Culture: Institutional Logics and Organizational Decisions, (Stanford University Press) was published in 2004. She received her Ph.D. in 1993 in Sociology from Stanford University.
William Ocasio is the John L. and Helen Kellogg Distinguished Professor of Management and Organizations at the Kellogg School of Management, and Professor of Sociology, by Courtesy, Northwestern University. In addition to institutional logics, his research focuses on attention, vocabularies, and strategy processes in organizations and institutional fields. Currently he is Senior Editor at Organization Science. He received his Ph.D. in 1992 in Organizational Behavior from Stanford University.
Michael Lounsbury is a Professor, Thornton A. Graham Chair, and Associate Dean of Research at the University of Alberta School of Business. He is also a Principal Investigator at the National Institute of Nanotechnology. His research focuses on institutional emergence and change, entrepreneurship, and the cultural dynamics of organizations and practice. He serves on a number of editorial boards and is the Series Editor of Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Associate Editor of Academy of Management Annals, as well as Co-Editor of Organization Studies. He received his Ph.D. in 1999 from Northwestern University in Sociology and Organizational Behavior.
Table of Contents
List of Figures | p. xi |
List of Tables | p. xvi |
Introduction to the Institutional Logics Perspective | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Institutional Logics as an Analytical Framework | p. 2 |
Aims of the Book | p. 4 |
Analytical Style of the Book | p. 5 |
Institutional Analysis as Interdisciplinary | p. 5 |
Pointing the Way to a New Approach | p. 6 |
Social Structure and Action | p. 6 |
Institutions as Material and Symbolic | p. 10 |
Institutions as Historically Contingent | p. 12 |
Institutions at Multiple Levels of Analysis | p. 13 |
Contents of the Book | p. 15 |
Precursors | p. 15 |
Macro-Societal Level | p. 16 |
Micro and Meso-Individual and Organization Levels | p. 16 |
Micro and Macro-Individual and Societal Levels | p. 16 |
Meso and Macro-Organization and Institutional Field Levels | p. 17 |
Meso and Macro-Institutional Field and Societal Levels | p. 17 |
Synthesis | p. 17 |
Conclusion | p. 18 |
Precursors to the Institutional Logics Perspective | p. 20 |
Introduction | p. 20 |
Theories of Isomorphism | p. 21 |
Variant: Micro Level | p. 23 |
Elaboration: From Societal Culture to Field Structure | p. 24 |
Elaboration: Origin, Reproduction, Disappearance | p. 28 |
Variant: Logic of Instrumentalism, of Appropriateness | p. 29 |
Variant: From Structural to Cognitive and Cultural | p. 30 |
Variants: Logics of Action | p. 33 |
Integration: Three Pillars and Carriers of Institutions | p. 35 |
Institutional Pillars | p. 36 |
Institutional Carriers | p. 39 |
Proliferation: Institutional Logics | p. 40 |
Variant: A Focus on Normative Dimensions | p. 46 |
Discussion and Conclusion | p. 47 |
Appendix: Comparison of Propositions: | p. 48 |
J. W. Meyer and Rowan (1977) | p. 48 |
DIMaggio and Powell (1983) | p. 48 |
Defining the Interinstitutional System | p. 50 |
Introduction | p. 50 |
Definitional Differences | p. 51 |
The Interinstitutional System as Ideal Type | p. 52 |
Institutional Orders: The X-Axis | p. 53 |
Institutional Orders: The Y-Axis | p. 54 |
Partial Autonomy: Cognitive and Organizational Loose Coupling | p. 57 |
Partial Autonomy: Near-Decomposability of Institutional Orders | p. 59 |
Definition of Institutional Fields | p. 61 |
Cultural Content: Cells of the X, Y Axes | p. 62 |
Cultural Space in Society | p. 62 |
Cultural Effects on Power and Agency | p. 64 |
Proliferation: Rearranging the Institutional Orders | p. 66 |
Variant: Community as an Institutional Order | p. 68 |
Discussion and Conclusion | p. 72 |
Appendix | p. 74 |
Microfoundations of Institutional Logics | p. 76 |
A Model of Human Behavior: Situated, Embedded, Boundedly Intentional Behavior | p. 78 |
Modeling the Microfoundations | p. 80 |
Dynamic Constructivism | p. 83 |
An Integrative Model of the Microfoundations of Institutional Logics | p. 84 |
Social Identities, Goals, and Schemas | p. 85 |
Social Identities | p. 85 |
Goals | p. 86 |
Schemas | p. 88 |
Focus of Attention | p. 89 |
Top-Down Effects of Institutional Logics and Organizational Practices | p. 91 |
Bottom-Up Environmental Stimuli | p. 91 |
Availability, Accessibility, and Activation | p. 92 |
Automatic and Controlled Attentional Processes | p. 93 |
From Activation to Social Interaction | p. 93 |
From Social Interactions to Organizational Identities and Practices | p. 95 |
Decision Making | p. 95 |
Sensemaking | p. 96 |
Mobilization | p. 97 |
Implications of the Model of Microfoundations | p. 98 |
Conclusion | p. 102 |
Stability and Change in the Interinstitutional System | p. 103 |
Introduction | p. 103 |
Evolutionary-Systems Level | p. 104 |
Historical Interdependence of Institutional Orders | p. 105 |
Individual-Societal-Level Effects on Institutional Change | p. 106 |
Cultural Entrepreneurship | p. 107 |
Case Narrative: Penney Segregates Family, Blends Religion and Corporation | p. 111 |
Case Narrative: Sperling Segregates the Professions and Blends the Market and Corporation | p. 112 |
Case Narrative: Ettinger Blends Family, State, Market, and Corporation | p. 114 |
Cross-Narrative Discussion | p. 117 |
Discussion | p. 119 |
Conclusion | p. 125 |
Dynamics of Organizational Practices and Identities | p. 128 |
Introduction | p. 128 |
From Social Interaction to Practices and Organizational Identities | p. 131 |
The Dynamics of Practices and Identities in Organizations | p. 133 |
The Dynamics of Practices and Identities Across Organizations | p. 141 |
Conclusion | p. 147 |
The Emergence and Evolution of Field-Level Logics | p. 148 |
Introduction | p. 148 |
A Model of Cultural Emergence | p. 150 |
Societal and External Logics | p. 150 |
Symbolic Representations: Theories, Frames, and Narratives | p. 152 |
Resource Environments and their Effects on Institutional Logics | p. 157 |
Vocabularies of Practice and the Emergence of Field-Level Logics | p. 158 |
Evolution and Change in Field-Level Logics | p. 161 |
Conclusion | p. 168 |
Implications of the Institutional Logics Perspective | p. 170 |
Implications for Other Disciplines and Substantive Research Domains | p. 172 |
Historical and Comparative Analysis of Institutions | p. 173 |
Institutional Complexity | p. 175 |
Social Movements | p. 175 |
Cultural and Institutional Entrepreneurship | p. 176 |
Institutional Work | p. 179 |
Organizational Identity | p. 180 |
Organizational Design | p. 181 |
Strategy | p. 182 |
Microprocesses | p. 183 |
Methods of Analysis | p. 184 |
Conclusion | p. 185 |
References | p. 187 |
Index | p. 221 |
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