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Journal ArticleDOI

Bourdieu and organizational analysis

TLDR
In this article, a more informed and comprehensive account of what a relational and Bourdieu-inspired agenda for organizational research might look like is presented, with the primary advantage of such an approach being the central place accorded therein to the social conditions under which inter- and intraorganizational power relations are produced, reproduced, and contested.
Abstract
Despite some promising steps in the right direction, organizational analysis has yet to exploit fully the theoretical and empirical possibilities inherent in the writings of Pierre Bourdieu. While certain concepts associated with his thought, such as field and capital, are already widely known in the organizational literature, the specific ways in which these terms are being used provide ample evidence that the full significance of his relational mode of thought has yet to be sufficiently apprehended. Moreover, the almost complete inattention to habitus, the third of Bourdieu’s major concepts, without which the concepts of field and capital (at least as he deployed them) make no sense, further attests to the misappropriation of his ideas and to the lack of appreciation of their potential usefulness. It is our aim in this paper, by contrast, to set forth a more informed and comprehensive account of what a relational – and, in particular, a Bourdieu-inspired – agenda for organizational research might look like. Accordingly, we examine the implications of his theoretical framework for interorganizational relations, as well as for organizations themselves analyzed as fields. The primary advantage of such an approach, we argue, is the central place accorded therein to the social conditions under which inter- and intraorganizational power relations are produced, reproduced, and contested.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of Industrial Bureaucracy.

TL;DR: In this article, an investigation of singel factory seen in the light of Max Weber's theory of bureacracy is described, and a partial report, to be followed by another, is given.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a General Theory of Strategic Action Fields

TL;DR: In this paper, a brief sketch of a general theory of strategic action fields (SAFs) is given, with a discussion of the main elements of the theory, describe the broader environment in which any SAF is embedded, consider the dynamics of stability and change in SAFs, and end with a respectful critique of other contemporary perspectives on social structure and agency.
Book ChapterDOI

Institutional Work and the Paradox of Embedded Agency

TL;DR: The role of individuals and organizations in institutional change is explored in this article, where the authors argue that individuals and organisations tend to comply, at least in appearance, with institutional pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Fields Past, Present and Future

TL;DR: The organizational field is defined as "a community of organizations that partakes of a common meaning system and whose participants interact more frequently and fatefully with one another than with actors outside the field".
Journal ArticleDOI

Re-Theorizing Change: Institutional Experimentation and the Struggle for Domination in the Field of Public Accounting

TL;DR: Using change theory integrated with Bourdieusian sociology, this paper re-theorize a major institutional shift in the field of public accounting, which involves the consolidation of commercial values in the auditing profession.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of social capital is introduced and illustrated, its forms are described, the social structural conditions under which it arises are examined, and it is used in an analys...
Journal ArticleDOI

Outline of a Theory of Practice

TL;DR: Bourdieu as mentioned in this paper develops a theory of practice which is simultaneously a critique of the methods and postures of social science and a general account of how human action should be understood.
Book

Exchange and Power in Social Life

Peter M. Blau
TL;DR: In a seminal work as discussed by the authors, Peter M. Blau used concepts of exchange, reciprocity, imbalance, and power to examine social life and to derive the more complex processes in social structure from the simpler ones.
Book

Foundations of Social Theory

TL;DR: In this article, a new approach to describing both stability and change in social systems by linking the behavior of individuals to organizational behavior is proposed. But the approach is not suitable for large-scale systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outline of a Theory of Practice.

Trending Questions (1)
Can organizational phenomena be explained by using the work of Pierre Bourdieu?

The paper suggests that organizational analysis has not fully utilized the theoretical possibilities of Bourdieu's work, indicating that his ideas can potentially explain organizational phenomena.