Managerial Responsibility as Negotiated Order: A Social Construction Perspective

被引:8
|
作者
Baiada-Hireche, Lorea [1 ]
Pasquero, Jean [2 ]
Chanlat, Jean-Francois [3 ]
机构
[1] TELECOM Ecole Management, Evry, France
[2] Univ Quebec Montreal UQAM, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[3] Univ Paris 09, CNRS, DRM, UMR 7088, Paris, France
关键词
Managerial responsibility; Ethical judgment; Negotiated order; Ethnography; Organizational crisis; ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING; BUSINESS ETHICS; ORGANIZATIONS; JUDGMENTS; IDENTITY; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1007/s10551-011-1172-7
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This article examines how employees form their perceptions of managerial responsibility in a concrete organizational setting. Drawing on negotiated order theory, it shows that these perceptions are the result of complex processes of social construction and negotiation, rather than the application of predetermined ethics models or norms. Employees' perceptions appear to be unstable; they are subject to constant alterations, fluctuating with the organizational circumstances, and are likely to create considerable organizational perturbations, especially when managers make complex and ambiguous decisions. This process is illustrated through an ethnographic study that analyzed the evolution of employee perceptions during a three-year crisis-one that led managers to repeatedly postpone salary payments to save jobs. The process approach adopted by the study highlights important dynamics that traditional business ethics approaches overlook, such as the fragility of the construct of managerial responsibility, which cannot be coherent unless it is constantly renegotiated among an organization's various employee groups.
引用
收藏
页码:17 / 31
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE SOCIAL WORKER IN THE CHANGING SOCIAL ORDER
    Taylor, Maurice
    SOCIAL FORCES, 1937, 15 (03) : 371 - 377
  • [42] The Managerial Sources of Corporate Social Responsibility: The Spread of Global Standards
    Gossling, Tobias
    BUSINESS ETHICS QUARTERLY, 2016, 26 (01) : 142 - 145
  • [43] Grounding managerial values towards social responsibility on an ideological framework
    Turker, Duygu
    Ozmen, Y. Serkan
    SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY JOURNAL, 2018, 14 (03) : 516 - 526
  • [44] The effect of managerial and institutional ownership on corporate social responsibility disclosure
    Nurleni, Nurleni
    Bandang, Agus
    Darmawati
    Amiruddin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LAW AND MANAGEMENT, 2018, 60 (04) : 979 - 987
  • [45] The end of managerial ideology: From corporate social responsibility to corporate social indifference
    Englander, E
    Kaufman, A
    ENTERPRISE & SOCIETY, 2004, 5 (03) : 404 - 450
  • [46] Managerial Overconfidence, Corporate Social Responsibility Activities, and Financial Constraints
    Park, Kyung-Hee
    Byun, Jinho
    Choi, Paul Moon Sub
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 12 (01)
  • [47] The effects of managerial and employee attributions for corporate social responsibility initiatives
    Vlachos, Pavlos A.
    Panagopoulos, Nikolaos G.
    Bachrach, Daniel G.
    Morgeson, Frederick P.
    JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2017, 38 (07) : 1111 - 1129
  • [48] Financial Instruments of a Managerial Accountingfor Purposes of the Corporate Social Responsibility
    Dubcova, Gabriela
    Kissova, Jana
    FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT OF FIRMS AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS: 10TH INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE, PTS I-IV, 2015, : 217 - 225
  • [49] Corporate Social Responsibility for Construction Enterprises
    Wang Kun
    Zheng Rongyue
    Jiang Jianlin
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2008 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONSTRUCTION & REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2008, : 660 - 663
  • [50] THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY AND INSANITY
    ROBERTS, CF
    GOLDING, SL
    LAW AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 1991, 15 (04) : 349 - 376