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Stewardship or Agency? A Social Embeddedness Reconciliation of Conduct and Performance in Public Family Businesses

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TLDR
This paper argues that both these views have application but under different circumstances, determined in part by the degree to which the firm and its executive actors are embedded within the family and thus identify with its interests.
Abstract
Two contradictory perspectives of family business conduct and performance are prominent in the literature. The stewardship perspective argues that family business owners and managers will act as farsighted stewards of their companies, investing generously in the business to enhance value for all stakeholders. By contrast, the agency and behavioral agency perspectives maintain that major family owners, in catering to family self-interest, will underinvest in the firm, avoid risk, and extract resources. This paper argues that both these views have application but under different circumstances, determined in part by the degree to which the firm and its executive actors are embedded within the family and thus identify with its interests. Stewardship behavior will be less common, and agency behavior will be more common the greater the number of family directors, officers, generations, and votes, and the more executives are susceptible to family influence. These findings are supported among Fortune 1000 firms, as well as among the subsample of those firms that are family businesses.

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Bowling alone: The collapse and revival of American community

TL;DR: As an example of how the current "war on terrorism" could generate a durable civic renewal, Putnam points to the burst in civic practices that occurred during and after World War II, which he says "permanently marked" the generation that lived through it and had a "terrific effect on American public life over the last half-century."

The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields (Chinese Translation)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that rational actors make their organizations increasingly similar as they try to change them, and describe three isomorphic processes-coercive, mimetic, and normative.
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Socioemotional Wealth in Family Firms Theoretical Dimensions, Assessment Approaches, and Agenda for Future Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make the case for the socioemotional wealth (SEW) approach as the potential dominant paradigm in the family business field and argue that SEW is the most important differentiator of the family firm as a unique entity and helps explain why family firms behave distinctively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stewardship Theory or Agency Theory: CEO Governance and Shareholder Returns:

TL;DR: In this article, an empirical test fails to support agency theory and provides some support for stewardship theory, which argues that shareholders interests require protection by separation of incumbency of roles of board chair and CEO.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disentangling the Incentive and Entrenchment Effects of Large Shareholdings

TL;DR: In this article, the authors disentangle the incentive and entrenchment effects of large ownership and find that firm value increases with the cash-flow ownership of the largest shareholder, consistent with a positive incentive effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk reduction as a managerial motive for conglomerate mergers

TL;DR: In this article, a manager's motivation for a conglomerate merger is investigated. And the authors show that managers engage in conglomerate mergers to decrease their largely undiversifiable "employment risk" (i.e., risk of losing job, professional reputation, etc.).
Journal ArticleDOI

How do family ownership, control and management affect firm value?

TL;DR: The authors found that the classic owner-manager conflict in non-family firms is more costly than the conflict between family and nonfamily shareholders in founder-CEO firms, and that the conflicts between family shareholders in descendant- CEO firms are more costly.
Book

The human group

TL;DR: The Human Group as mentioned in this paper is one of the seminal works in the study of small groups in sociology, psychology, management, and organizations, and has been widely used in the literature.
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How does the stewardship theory influence the role of managers in a company?

Stewardship theory suggests that managers in family businesses act as stewards, investing for long-term value, while agency theory highlights self-interest leading to underinvestment and resource extraction.