Some members of our OMT community may be interested in this new book from Stanford University Press: Anonymous Agencies, Backstreet Businesses, and Covert Collectives: Rethinking Organizations in the 21st Century by Craig R. Scott (Rutgers University). For more information, see the abstract below or go to the book website at http://sup.org/book.cgi?isbn=0804781389.
Book Abstract: Many organizations and their members devote extensive resources to promoting themselves and being known to others. However, not all organizations want or need their identity to be recognized and not all organizational members want to have their membership or affiliation known by at least certain audiences. As we consider secret societies, anonymous support programs, hate groups, terrorist cells, covert military units, organized crime, gangs, parts of the underground economy, front organizations, stigmatized businesses, and even certain hidden enterprises tucked away in quiet office parks, we have to question what we think we know about the identity goals of organizations and their members. This book offers a framework for thinking about how a wide range of organizations and their members communicate their identity to relevant audiences. Considering the degree to which organizations strategically make themselves visible, the extent to which members express their identification with the organization, and whether the relevant audience is more mass/public or local, we can describe various "regions" in which these collectives reside-ranging from transparent and shaded to more shadowed and dark. Importantly, organizations operating in these spaces differ in how they and their members communicate identity to others. Taking a closer look at groups like Earth First!, the Church of Scientology, Alcoholics Anonymous, the KKK, Skull and Bones, U.S. special missions units, men's bathhouses, and various terrorist organizations, this groundbreaking book draws attention to shaded, shadowed, and dark collectives as important organizations in the contemporary landscape.
Craig
Craig R. Scott, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Communication
Vice Chair, ICA Organizational Communication Division
School of Communication & Information
Rutgers University
4 Huntington Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Voice: 848-932-7125; Fax: 732-932-6916; Office in 201 DeWitt (185 College Avenue)
Web: http://comminfo.rutgers.edu/directory/crscott/index.html
Linked in: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/11/b83/241
Author of Anonymous Agencies, Backstreet Businesses, and Covert Collectives: Rethinking Organizations in the 21st Century