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The book analyzes, synthesizes, and further develops theoretical and methodological tools in the rising new school in institutional analysis, the institutional logics perspective, which offers opportunities to examine how individual and organizational actors are a product of multiple social locations in an inter-institutional system.
Patricia 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.
Show moreThe book analyzes, synthesizes, and further develops theoretical and methodological tools in the rising new school in institutional analysis, the institutional logics perspective, which offers opportunities to examine how individual and organizational actors are a product of multiple social locations in an inter-institutional system.
Patricia 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.
Show more1: Introduction to the Institutional Logics Perspective
2: Precursors to the Institutional Logics Perspective
3: Defining the Inter-institutional System
4: The Emergence, Stability and Change of the Inter-institutional
System
5: Micro-Foundations of Institutional Logics
6: The Dynamics of Organizational Practices and Identities
7: The Emergence and Evolution of Field-Level Logics
8: Implications for Future Research
Winner of the Academy of Managements 2013 George R. Terry Book Award
Patricia 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.
In The Institutional Logics Perspective, Thornton, Ocasio, and
Lounsbury have crafted a foundational treatise that will be a
touchstone for future inquiry on logics. As an explanation for how
actors, actions, and context come together in organizational and
institutional settings, the institutional logics perspective has
found a broad and diverse audience; this book will only widen its
appeal. The authors break fresh theoretical ground and offer a
solid conceptual footing for the study of logics; as such, the book
has much to recommend it.
*Mary Ann Glynn, Administrative Sciences Quarterly (forthcoming
2013)*
This book is a must-read. Thornton, Ocasio and Lounsbury take
stock, in a poised and systematic manner, of what has been achieved
so far by the Institutional Logics perspective. They also point to
what remains to be done. Building on a rich heritage, the
Institutional Logics perspective threads the path to new and
exciting frontiers a multi-levels theory of institutions, the
stabilization of solid micro-foundations, a refreshing return to
history and the exploration of the dynamics of identities. The
agenda is attractive and this book develops a highly useful road
map.
*Marie-Laure Djelic, ESSEC Business School*
Over the past generation, neoinstitutional theory has become
perhaps the dominant perspective in the sociology of organizations.
The institutional logics perspective has became an intriguing
alternative that seeks to encompass and extend the insights of
neoinstitutionalism to both lower and higher units of analysis.
This book goes farther than any prior work in advancing the
institutional logics perspective.
*Gerald F. Davis, University of Michigan*
The Institutional Logics Perspective is an essential road map to
and program for the future development of theories of institutional
logic. Thornton, Ocasio, and Lounsbury offer a host of uncharted,
under-theorized, unthought, and unexplored causal mechanisms
linking the macro and the micro, practice and interaction, value
and identity. The authors lay out the inter-institutional system,
the doubleness of rationality, the cultural contingency of
interest, the ideality of material practice, and the ways in which
we have mistakenly assumed that institution effaces agency and
hence politics. We are going to have to think and work this text
for a while.
*Roger O. Friedland, University College Santa Barbara*
No concept in the field of organization studies has been more
promising than that of institutional logics and no concept has been
more elusive, at times to the point of evanescence. The authors
bring institutional logics down to earth, unpacking the concept,
tracing its history and exploring its ambiguities, identifying its
component parts, and giving each the close attention it deserves.
This much-needed and well-conceived volume provides an invaluable
service to students of institutions and organizational fields.
*Paul DiMaggio, Princeton University*
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