Organization and Management Theory OMT

  • 1.  CFP: EGOS 2015 Paradoxes and Unreason: Provoking Greater Examination into Organizational Life

    Posted 09-19-2014 09:23
    Colleagues -

    If you are studying paradoxes and tensions, we hope you will consider joining us for an engaging sub-theme at the European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS) conference in 2015. Please email us if you have any questions.

    European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS)
    Sub-theme 52: Paradoxes and Unreason: Provoking Greater Examination into Organizational Life
    Athens, Greece
    July 2-4, 2015
    Short Papers Due:  January 12, 2015

    Convenors

    Constantine Andriopoulos, City University London, UK

     

    Ella Miron-Spektor, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Israel

     

    Wendy K. Smith, University of Delaware, USA

     

    Change continues to accelerate, increasingly surfacing paradoxical tensions in organizations. Where we once sought order, clarity, and consistency in organizations, we now find disorder, dynamism, and inconsistencies. These contradictions abound in organizational goals, structures, processes, cultures and identities (Smith & Lewis, 2011). For example, long-term sustainability goals depend on both short-term profits and increased costly investments in long-term relationships (Gittel, 2004). Organizational structures must provide clarity and stability, yet enable flexibility and change (Klein et al, 2006). Contradictions raise paradoxical tensions (e.g. stability vs. change; control vs. freedom, centralization vs. decentralization), competing yet interrelated demands that exist simultaneously and persist over time (e.g. Andriopoulos & Lewis, 2009; Cameron & Quinn, 2006; Miron-Spektor et al., 2011; Smith & Lewis, 2011). Paradoxical tensions are complex. As they arise, they provoke questions and confusion, encouraging both scholars and practitioners to pause and reflect. Paradox scholars argue that these tensions are inherent in organizations, and attending to them simultaneously fuels long-run organizational success and sustainability (e.g. Miron-Spektor et al., 2011; Smith & Lewis, 2011). Moving beyond oversimplified either/or trade-offs, a paradox perspective seeks to transform management mindsets and practices by identifying both/and opportunities (Lewis, 2000). Yet they raise challenging questions about how organizations can effectively do so. These paradoxical tensions demand us to reflect on our rationality and reason. They force us to reexamine organizational life, in an attempt to make sense of this greater complexity (e.g. Fiol et al., 2009; Jarzabkowski & Sillince, 2007; Jay, 2013, Smith 2014).


    In this sub-theme, we seek to share and motivate research that extends our understanding of how tensions and paradoxes impact our thinking and reflections on organizational life. Specifically, we invite papers that explore some of the following, illustrative questions:
    • How are tensions and paradoxes perceived, reflected upon and enacted by organizational actors? How does an emphasis on "either/or tradeoffs" turns into "both/and" practice, in what conditions, and with what outcomes?
    • How do tensions and paradoxes fuel reflections, examinations, and sense making?
    • What are the outcomes associated with different strategies for coping with/managing paradoxical tensions?
    • How can researchers explore tensions and paradoxes? How might paradox-oriented methods (assuming that tensions are dynamic – cyclical and constantly shifting in their relationship to one another) differ from dominant conventions aimed at identifying tradeoffs through central tendencies?
     
     

    Constantine Andriopoulos is Professor of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Cass Business School, UK. His research focuses on the management of tensions and paradoxes to sustain innovation in high velocity industries. Constantine was co-convenor of the paradox sub-theme for the EGOS Colloquium 2012 in Helsinki.

     

    Ella Miron-Spektor is Assistant Professor of Organizational Psychology at the Faculty of Industrial Engineering and Management, Technion, Israel. Her research interests include tensions and paradoxes that impede and enable creativity and innovation, organizational and team learning, and emotions at the workplace.

     

    Wendy K. Smith is Associate Professor of Management in the Department of Business Administration, Lerner College of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware, USA. Her research focuses on managing strategic paradoxes, including exploring/exploiting and social/financial goals. Wendy won the EGOS Best Paper Award in 2008.



    --
     
    Wendy K. Smith, Ph.D.
    Associate Professor of Management
    Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics
    University of Delaware
    Newark, DE 19716
     
     







  • 2.  CFP European Journal of Industrial Relations

    Posted 09-19-2014 12:05
    * Please could you post the following call for papers.*
    Thank you
    Anna Soulsby

    ....................................

    Call for Papers

    European Journal of Industrial Relations

    Work and Organization in the Age of Global Economic Crisis:
    Industrial Relations in the Post-Socialist Societies of Europe

    Guest Co-editors: Anna Soulsby, Graham Hollinshead, Thomas Steger


    In this special issue, we invite comparative studies that examine growing insecurities in the fields of work, organization and employment in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), including the effects of migration, in the context of the international 'crisis of capitalism'. We are interested in research that investigates local responses (at the levels of the workplace, establishment or industry) to the spread of uncontrolled market forces in the region and makes connections to debates in the wider social sciences. We are particularly interested in studies which analyse the latest phases of transition in CEE as subject to contestation and negotiation by a plurality of groupings within economy and society, and which bring to the fore the significance of class, gender and ethnicity. We welcome submissions which capture the unevenness of developments since the financial crisis through comparative analysis of changes in the institutional arrangements impinging on work and employment. We also wish to explore whether, and how, the particularly hostile environment for trade unionism in CEE is creating new avenues for renewal and reinvention, and whether the resourcefulness and imagination exhibited by trade unionists in the region offer real learning opportunities for the international labour movement.

    Key Dates and Contact Details:
    Submission of extended abstracts (maximum 1000 words not including references):
    29 December 2014.
    Submission of full papers: 31 July 2015.

    Please contact one of the guest co-editors, or the Editor, for any queries. The abstract submission should be sent by e-mail attachment to the following:
    anna.soulsby@nottingham.ac.uk
    G.hollinshead@herts.ac.uk
    T.steger@wiwi.uni-regensberg.de
    r.hyman@lse.ac.uk




    This message and any attachment are intended solely for the addressee and may contain confidential information. If you have received this message in error, please send it back to me, and immediately delete it.   Please do not use, copy or disclose the information contained in this message or in any attachment.  Any views or opinions expressed by the author of this email do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nottingham.

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  • 3.  CFP for Special Issue of European Journal of Industrial Relations

    Posted 12-11-2014 13:50
     
    * Please could you post the following call for papers.*
    Thank you.
    Best wishes
    Anna Soulsby

    ....................................

    Call for Papers - Special Issue

    European Journal of Industrial Relations

    Work and Organization in the Age of Global Economic Crisis:
    Industrial Relations in the Post-Socialist Societies of Europe

    Guest Co-editors: Anna Soulsby, Graham Hollinshead, Thomas Steger


    In this special issue, we invite comparative studies that examine growing insecurities in the fields of work, organization and employment in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), including the effects of migration, in the context of the international 'crisis of capitalism'. We are interested in research that investigates local responses (at the levels of the workplace, establishment or industry) to the spread of uncontrolled market forces in the region and makes connections to debates in the wider social sciences. We are particularly interested in studies which analyse the latest phases of transition in CEE as subject to contestation and negotiation by a plurality of groupings within economy and society, and which bring to the fore the significance of class, gender and ethnicity. We welcome submissions which capture the unevenness of developments since the financial crisis through comparative analysis of changes in the institutional arrangements impinging on work and employment. We also wish to explore whether, and how, the particularly hostile environment for trade unionism in CEE is creating new avenues for renewal and reinvention, and whether the resourcefulness and imagination exhibited by trade unionists in the region offer real learning opportunities for the international labour movement.

    Key Dates and Contact Details:
    Submission of extended abstracts (maximum 1000 words not including references):
    29 December 2014.
    Submission of full papers: 31 July 2015.

    Please contact one of the guest co-editors, or the Editor, for any queries. The abstract submission should be sent by e-mail attachment to the following:
    anna.soulsby@nottingham.ac.uk
    G.hollinshead@herts.ac.uk
    T.steger@wiwi.uni-regensberg.de
    r.hyman@lse.ac.uk



       This message and any attachment are intended solely for the addressee and may contain confidential information. If you have received this message in error, please send it back to me, and immediately delete it.   Please do not use, copy or disclose the information contained in this message or in any attachment.  Any views or opinions expressed by the author of this email do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nottingham.  This message has been checked for viruses but the contents of an attachment may still contain software viruses which could damage your computer system, you are advised to perform your own checks. Email communications with the University of Nottingham may be monitored as permitted by UK legislation. 


  • 4.  CFP: EGOS 2015 Paradoxes and Unreason: Provoking Greater Examination into Organizational Life

    Posted 01-02-2015 04:21
    Colleagues -

    We wanted to remind you that the deadline for submitting extended abstracts to the European Conference for Organization Studies (EGOS) is January 12, 2015.

    If you have a paper on paradox, tensions, dualities, competing demands, etc. we hope you will consider applying to this EGOS subtrack to join this community of scholars this summer.

    Costas Andriopoulos, Ella Miron Spektor, Wendy Smith



    On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 9:23 AM, Wendy Smith <smithw@udel.edu> wrote:
    Colleagues -

    If you are studying paradoxes and tensions, we hope you will consider joining us for an engaging sub-theme at the European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS) conference in 2015. Please email us if you have any questions.

    European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS)
    Sub-theme 52: Paradoxes and Unreason: Provoking Greater Examination into Organizational Life
    Athens, Greece
    July 2-4, 2015
    Short Papers Due:  January 12, 2015

    Convenors

    Constantine Andriopoulos, City University London, UK

     

    Ella Miron-Spektor, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Israel

     

    Wendy K. Smith, University of Delaware, USA

     

    Change continues to accelerate, increasingly surfacing paradoxical tensions in organizations. Where we once sought order, clarity, and consistency in organizations, we now find disorder, dynamism, and inconsistencies. These contradictions abound in organizational goals, structures, processes, cultures and identities (Smith & Lewis, 2011). For example, long-term sustainability goals depend on both short-term profits and increased costly investments in long-term relationships (Gittel, 2004). Organizational structures must provide clarity and stability, yet enable flexibility and change (Klein et al, 2006). Contradictions raise paradoxical tensions (e.g. stability vs. change; control vs. freedom, centralization vs. decentralization), competing yet interrelated demands that exist simultaneously and persist over time (e.g. Andriopoulos & Lewis, 2009; Cameron & Quinn, 2006; Miron-Spektor et al., 2011; Smith & Lewis, 2011). Paradoxical tensions are complex. As they arise, they provoke questions and confusion, encouraging both scholars and practitioners to pause and reflect. Paradox scholars argue that these tensions are inherent in organizations, and attending to them simultaneously fuels long-run organizational success and sustainability (e.g. Miron-Spektor et al., 2011; Smith & Lewis, 2011). Moving beyond oversimplified either/or trade-offs, a paradox perspective seeks to transform management mindsets and practices by identifying both/and opportunities (Lewis, 2000). Yet they raise challenging questions about how organizations can effectively do so. These paradoxical tensions demand us to reflect on our rationality and reason. They force us to reexamine organizational life, in an attempt to make sense of this greater complexity (e.g. Fiol et al., 2009; Jarzabkowski & Sillince, 2007; Jay, 2013, Smith 2014).


    In this sub-theme, we seek to share and motivate research that extends our understanding of how tensions and paradoxes impact our thinking and reflections on organizational life. Specifically, we invite papers that explore some of the following, illustrative questions:
    • How are tensions and paradoxes perceived, reflected upon and enacted by organizational actors? How does an emphasis on "either/or tradeoffs" turns into "both/and" practice, in what conditions, and with what outcomes?
    • How do tensions and paradoxes fuel reflections, examinations, and sense making?
    • What are the outcomes associated with different strategies for coping with/managing paradoxical tensions?
    • How can researchers explore tensions and paradoxes? How might paradox-oriented methods (assuming that tensions are dynamic – cyclical and constantly shifting in their relationship to one another) differ from dominant conventions aimed at identifying tradeoffs through central tendencies?
     
     

    Constantine Andriopoulos is Professor of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Cass Business School, UK. His research focuses on the management of tensions and paradoxes to sustain innovation in high velocity industries. Constantine was co-convenor of the paradox sub-theme for the EGOS Colloquium 2012 in Helsinki.

     

    Ella Miron-Spektor is Assistant Professor of Organizational Psychology at the Faculty of Industrial Engineering and Management, Technion, Israel. Her research interests include tensions and paradoxes that impede and enable creativity and innovation, organizational and team learning, and emotions at the workplace.

     

    Wendy K. Smith is Associate Professor of Management in the Department of Business Administration, Lerner College of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware, USA. Her research focuses on managing strategic paradoxes, including exploring/exploiting and social/financial goals. Wendy won the EGOS Best Paper Award in 2008.



    --
     
    Wendy K. Smith, Ph.D.
    Associate Professor of Management
    Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics
    University of Delaware
    Newark, DE 19716