A PLACE IN THE WORLD: VULNERABILITY, ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
DOI :
Title :
A PLACE IN THE WORLD: VULNERABILITY, WELLBEING, AND THE UBIQUITOUS EVALUATION THAT ANIMATES PARTICIPATION IN INSTITUTIONAL PROCESSES
Author(s) :
Creed, W. E. Douglas [Auteur]
Hudson, Bryant Ashley [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Okhuysen, Gerardo Andres [Auteur]
Smith-Crowe, Kristin [Auteur]
Hudson, Bryant Ashley [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Okhuysen, Gerardo Andres [Auteur]
Smith-Crowe, Kristin [Auteur]
Journal title :
Academy of Management Review
Publisher :
Academy of Management
Publication date :
2020-10-30
ISSN :
0363-7425
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Gestion et management
English abstract : [en]
We explain how and why people become motivated to participate in institutional processes. Responding to recent efforts to address the micro and meso in institutional analysis, we introduce two interrelated constructs, a ...
Show more >We explain how and why people become motivated to participate in institutional processes. Responding to recent efforts to address the micro and meso in institutional analysis, we introduce two interrelated constructs, a person’s embodied world of concern and a community’s shared world of concern, which shape how people experience, evaluate, and participate in institutional arrangements. The world of concern, which is the product of people’s sedimented experiences of thriving and suffering, becomes the basis for their commitments to antagonisms towards certain social arrangements. The world of concern, as a lens, sheds light on the complex ways the macro, meso, and micro levels are co-implicated in constructing commitments and attachments that animate action in institutional arenas by providing a new metaphor, one that links the realism of participant concerns to the micro dynamics that underpin institutions. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of these ideas for future research.Show less >
Show more >We explain how and why people become motivated to participate in institutional processes. Responding to recent efforts to address the micro and meso in institutional analysis, we introduce two interrelated constructs, a person’s embodied world of concern and a community’s shared world of concern, which shape how people experience, evaluate, and participate in institutional arrangements. The world of concern, which is the product of people’s sedimented experiences of thriving and suffering, becomes the basis for their commitments to antagonisms towards certain social arrangements. The world of concern, as a lens, sheds light on the complex ways the macro, meso, and micro levels are co-implicated in constructing commitments and attachments that animate action in institutional arenas by providing a new metaphor, one that links the realism of participant concerns to the micro dynamics that underpin institutions. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of these ideas for future research.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
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