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James G. Carrier

Bio: James G. Carrier is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social control. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 79 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper defined commensuration as the comparison of different entities according to a common metric, and discussed the cognitive and political stakes inherent in calling something incommensurable, and provided a framework for future empirical study of commensure and demonstrate how this analytic focus can inform established fields of sociological inquiry.
Abstract: Although it is evident in routine decision-making and a crucial vehicle of rationalization, commensuration as a general social process has been given little consideration by sociologists. This article defines commensuration as the comparison of different entities according to a common metric, notes commensuration's long history as an instrument of social thought, analyzes commensuration as a mode of power, and discusses the cognitive and political stakes inherent in calling something incommensurable. We provide a framework for future empirical study of commensuration and demonstrate how this analytic focus can inform established fields of sociological inquiry.

1,368 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a multimethod study of one open source software community, they found that members developed a shared basis of f  o r erentity of f f e r e r.
Abstract: Little is known about how communities producing collective goods govern themselves. In a multimethod study of one open source software community, we found that members developed a shared basis of f...

807 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors deconstructs and reconstructs the story text from a feminist perspective, examining what it says, what it does not say, and what it might have said, suggesting that organizational efforts to help women have suppressed gender conflict and reified false dichotomies between public and private realms of endeavor.
Abstract: This paper begins with a story told by a corporation president to illustrate what his organization was doing to “help” women employees balance the demands of work and home. The paper deconstructs and reconstructs this story text from a feminist perspective, examining what it says, what it does not say, and what it might have said. This analysis reveals how organizational efforts to “help women” have suppressed gender conflict and reified false dichotomies between public and private realms of endeavor, suggesting why it has proven so difficult to eradicate gender discrimination in organizations. Implications of a feminist perspective for organizational theory are discussed.

584 citations

Book
08 Nov 2001
TL;DR: Lazega et al. as discussed by the authors examined cooperation among partners in a US corporate law firm and provided a grounded theory of collective action among rival peers, or collegiality, and presented a theory of the collegial organization which generalizes its results to all kinds of partnerships.
Abstract: Organizations performing non-routine, innovative, often knowledge- intensive tasks - for example professional partnerships - need a rather flat, collegial, and non - bureaucratic structure This book examines cooperation among partners in a US corporate law firm and provides a grounded theory of collective action among rival peers, or collegiality It is first network study of such a frim Members (partners and associates) are portrayed as independent entrepreneurs who build social niches in their organization and cultivate status competition among themselves This behaviour allows them to fulfil their commitment to an extremely constraining partnership agreement and generates informal social mechanisms (bounded solidarity, lateral control, oligarchic regualtion) that help a flat organization govern itself: maintain individual performance, even for tenured partners; capitalize knowledge and control quality; monitor and sanction opportunistic free-riding; solve the 'too many chefs' problem; balance the powers of rainmakers and schedulers; and integrate the firm in spite of many centrifugal forces These mechanisms and the solutions they provide are examined using a broadly-conceived structural approach combining theory-driven network analysis, ethnography of task forces performing knowledge-intensive work, and analysis of management and internal politics in the firm Emmanuel Lazega presents a theory of the collegial organization which generalizes its results to all kinds of partnerships, larger multinational professional services firms, and collegial pockets in flattening bureaucracies alike

456 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that concern over whether attitudes correspond to behavior is an overly narrow and misguided question and instead consider what interviewing and other data gathering techniques are best suited for, and point out new methodological challenges, particularly concerning the incorporation of historical and institutional dimensions into interview-based studies.
Abstract: Against the background of recent methodological debates pitting ethnography against interviewing, this paper offers a defense of the latter and argues for methodological pluralism and pragmatism and against methodological tribalism. Drawing on our own work and on other sources, we discuss some of the strengths and weaknesses of interviewing. We argue that concern over whether attitudes correspond to behavior is an overly narrow and misguided question. Instead we offer that we should instead consider what interviewing and other data gathering techniques are best suited for. In our own work, we suggest, we have used somewhat unusual interviewing techniques to reveal how institutional systems and the construction of social categories, boundaries, and status hierarchies organize social experience. We also point to new methodological challenges, particularly concerning the incorporation of historical and institutional dimensions into interview-based studies. We finally describe fruitful directions for future research, which may result in methodological advances while bringing together the strengths of various data collection techniques.

420 citations