TY - JOUR
T1 - Confronting grand challenges in bureaucratic systems
T2 - The path towards open organizing
AU - Burke, Gary
AU - Wolf, Carola
PY - 2020/8/1
Y1 - 2020/8/1
N2 - This study explores how practitioners in complex bureaucratic organizations attempt to escape the “iron cage” of bureaucracy and utilise open organizing to tackle complex grand challenges. Based on an in-depth longitudinal study of how a local Sustainability and Transformation Partnership (STP) implements the regulatory push towards open organizing in the UK national health care sector, we offer a longitudinal analysis of the dynamic transitioning process towards more open and collaborative organizing across organizational and professional boundaries. In contrast to the anti-bureaucratic sentiment dominant in many scholarly discussions around open organizing, our analysis suggests that bureaucracy plays a pivotal and multifaceted role in this process as bureaucratic rationality and procedures condition the adoption of openness. Furthermore, we find that bureaucracy plays an important enabling role in precipitating openness and extricating practitioners when they become trapped in webs of complexity, collective inertia and indecision."
AB - This study explores how practitioners in complex bureaucratic organizations attempt to escape the “iron cage” of bureaucracy and utilise open organizing to tackle complex grand challenges. Based on an in-depth longitudinal study of how a local Sustainability and Transformation Partnership (STP) implements the regulatory push towards open organizing in the UK national health care sector, we offer a longitudinal analysis of the dynamic transitioning process towards more open and collaborative organizing across organizational and professional boundaries. In contrast to the anti-bureaucratic sentiment dominant in many scholarly discussions around open organizing, our analysis suggests that bureaucracy plays a pivotal and multifaceted role in this process as bureaucratic rationality and procedures condition the adoption of openness. Furthermore, we find that bureaucracy plays an important enabling role in precipitating openness and extricating practitioners when they become trapped in webs of complexity, collective inertia and indecision."
UR - https://research.aston.ac.uk/en/publications/408c1b05-3374-4786-a967-338251ad7868
U2 - 10.5465/AMBPP.2020.242
DO - 10.5465/AMBPP.2020.242
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
SN - 0065-0668
JO - Academy of Management Proceedings
JF - Academy of Management Proceedings
ER -