Emergence / edited by Marc-David L. Seidel, Henrich R. Greve.
Material type:
TextSeries: Research in the sociology of organizations ; v. 50.Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Description: 1 online resource (380) pagesISBN: 9781786359148 (e-book)Subject(s): Organizational sociology | Organizational behavior | Business & Economics -- Organizational Behavior | Organizational theory & behaviourAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 302.35 LOC classification: HM786 | .E44 2017Online resources: Click here to access online | Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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| HM753 .N38 2006 National culture and groups | HM753 .R45 2006 Reflections on Identity in Four African Cities | HM786 .A34 2019 Agents, actors, actorhood : | HM786 .E44 2017 Emergence / | HM786 .E96 2019 Evolutionary selection processes : | HM786 .F76 2017 From categories to categorization : | HM786 .I57 2013 Institutional logics in action |
Includes index.
Prelims -- Emergence : how novelty, growth, and formation shape organizations and their ecosystems -- Part I: Novelty -- Part II: Growth -- Part III: Formation.
The recent growth in research on the topic of evolutionary novelties inspired this volume of Research in the Sociology of Organizations. While previous sociological work has done an admirable job of understanding selection and differentiation processes, it has widely ignored the origin of novelty and how it grows to form initial structures and practices. Emergence is an easy to understand intuitive concept, as it simply means that an object comes into existence or appearance, but it needs further unpacking as a description of a widespread social process. In this book, emergence is seen as a process that involves 1) the creation of novelty, 2) its growth to a salient size, and 3) its formation into a recognizable social object, process, or structure. Each step should be understood through theory and empirical work. Yet the theory of each step can differ from, though it may be related to, the theory of the other two. As a consequence, emergence is a much more complex research topic than is suggested by a single word and it is these complexities that are examined in this book.
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