Title: The Response of Organizations to their Environments
1The Response of Organizations to their
Environments
- And the changing contexts of Institutional Theory
Tracy Alberry EDU 730 Spring 2009
2Key Terms
- New Institutionalism
- Structuralism
- Legitimacy
- Isomorphism
3New institutionalism or neoinstitutionalism
- describes social theory that focuses on
developing a sociological view of
institutions--the way they interact and the way
they affect society. It provides a way of viewing
institutions outside of the traditional views of
economics by explaining why so many businesses
end up having the same organizational structure
(isomorphism) even though they evolved in
different ways, and how institutions shape the
behavior of individual members. - From http//www.answers.com/topic/new-institution
alism
4Meyer and Rowan
- Describes how todays formal structure of
organizations reflects the myths of the
institutional environment rather than the
demands of work - Meyer and Rowan explain that organizations
incorporate the practices and procedures defined
by rationalized concepts to increase their
legitimacy.
- Organizations adopt the practices and procedures
employed by successful organizations assumed to
be rational based on another organizations
successin hopes that they too will succeed.
5THE IRON CAGE REVISITED INSTITUTIONAL
ISOMORPHISM AND COLLECTIVE RATIONALITY IN
ORGANIZATIONAL FIELDS
- Structural change in organizations is less
driven by competition or efficiency. Rather,
bureaucratization and organizational change occur
as the result of processes that make
organizations more similar without necessarily
making them more efficient. Bureaucratization and
other forms of homogenization emerge, we argue,
out of the structuration (Giddens, 1979)
DiMaggio Powell (1983) - Scott would argue that organizations become
similar in hopes of becoming as successful as
other organizations. - Organizations choose structures that will make
them more acceptable to the culture or
society.(legitimacy)
6THE IRON CAGE REVISITED INSTITUTIONAL
ISOMORPHISM AND COLLECTIVE RATIONALITY IN
ORGANIZATIONAL FIELDS
- Structuration consists of four parts
- an increase in the extent of interaction among
organizations in the field - the emergence of sharply defined
interorganizational structures of domination and
patterns of coalition - an increase in the information load with which
organizations in a field must contend - and the development of a mutual awareness among
participants in a set of organizations that they
are Involved in a common enterprise (DiMaggio,
1982).
Do we see structuration in Education?
7Isomorphism from Dimaggio Powell (1983)
- Isomorphism is a "constraining process that
forces one unit in a population to resemble other
units that face the same set of environmental
conditions". " There are two types of ismorphism
competitive and institutional, "Organizations
compete not just for resources and customers, but
for political power and institutional legitimacy,
for social as well as economic fitness". - If there is uncertainty, some organizations may
try to imitate or model other organizations.
8Isomorphism
- Do we see isomorphism in current trends in
education? - What are some examples?
9INSTITUTIONAL THEORY ACCORDING TO SCOTT
- Institutional theory is related to the aspects of
social structure. It considers the processes by
which structures, including schemas, rules,
norms, and routines, become established as
authoritative guidelines for social behavior. It
inquires into how these elements are created,
diffused, adopted, and adapted over space and
time and how they fall into decline and disuse.
Although the ostensible subject is stability and
order in social life, students of institutions
must attend not just to consensus and conformity
but to conflict and change in social structures
(Scott , p. 1, 2004).
10ORGANIZATIONS SOCIALLY CONSTRUCTED
- According to Scott, in an unpublished paper by
Meyer, Meyer (1970) suggested that much social
order is a product of social norms and rules that
constitute particular types of actors and specify
ways in which they can take action. Such
behaviors are not so much socially influenced as
socially constructed. Pg 5.
11W. Richard Scott, "Unpacking Institutional
Arguments"
- Scott focuses on the importance of environments
and the importance of different cultures and the
roles those play in organizations. Scott sees
organizations as having not just one but multiple
environments. These environments affect an
organizations forms and functions.
12Scott pulls from the work of Meyer and Rowan
- Formal Structures blueprints of the
organizations activities such as listing of
offices, departments and programs linked by
explicit goals and policies that make up the
rational theory of how all the organizations
activities fit together (Meyer and Rowan, 1991).
13Scott-Distinction between Institutional and
Technical
- Technical Environments
- Exercise output control over organizations-rewards
for effective and efficient control of the work
process (service or process) - Complex technologies
- exchanges
- Institutional Environments
- reward organizations for implementing the
correct structures and processes - Rules
- Socially defined categories
- (Scott, p. 167)
Most organizations have both. Seems to be a new
cultural emphasis.
14Legitimacy
- Legitimacy is the way organizations claim
societal values. Organizations deal actively and
strategically with their environments. Their goal
is to gain legitimacy.
15Legitimacy
- Legitimacy is the societal evaluations of
organizational goals. - Explaining or justifying the means to an end.
- Meyer and Scott (1983) organizational legitimacy
refers to the degree of cultural support for an
organization.
16Scott specifically
- This article examines
- how institutional environments affect
organizational focus and functions. - It examines causal arguments being made.
- How cultural and structural elements in
environments affect an organization - Creates the argument between new and old
institutional theories
17Old vs. New
- Scott seems to be presenting the new
institutional theory versus the old - Selznick (1996) summarizes - maybe the old and
new theories of institutional environments are
not so far apart. - He warns that if you differentiate between the
old and the new, it may affect the contribution
of institutional theory to major issues of
bureaucracy and social policy.
18Scott presents seven arguments to explain the
ways environments affect organizations.
- The Imposition of Organizational Structure
- The Authorization of Organizational Structure
- The Inducement of Organizational Structure
- The Acquisition of Organizational Structure
- The Imprinting of Organizational Structure
- The Incorporation of Environmental Structure
- The Bypassing of Organizational Structure
19Imposition
Imposition describes the situation when
environmental agents exist that have sufficient
power to impose structural forms on subordinate
organizational unit.
20Authorization
- authorization, differs because the subordinate
unit is not compelled to conform to the
environmental demand but does so voluntarily in
order to receive legitimating. Some environments
do not have agents with the power and/or
authority to impose organizational change.
21Inducement
- In this scenario inducement mechanisms emerge
whereby environments provide incentives (e.g.
funding) to organizations that comply with the
environmental agents demands.
22Acquisition
- The deliberate choosing of structural models by
organizational actors. - The adoption of institutional designs in order to
be more modern, appropriate or rational. - Voluntary adoption of structural patterns.
23Imprinting
- In some situations imprinting occurs where the
structure of the organization follows the basic
logic common to most organizations in the same
environment at the time of the organizations
founding.
24Incorporation
- Incorporation refers to the tendency of
organizations to have things happen that may not
be intended. The more complex the environmental
elements the greater the administrative
complexity and the less program coherence.
25Bypassing
- Bypassing occurs when institutionally shared
beliefs, rather than organizational structure,
determine actions. - Orderliness and coherence in American schools is
based on institutionally shared beliefs rather
than organizational structures (Meyer, Scott and
Deal, 1981)
26Scott Summary
- Scott shows us that organizations face many types
of organizational structures that are affected by
cultural systems. He seems to argue that
organizations may have some choice in selecting
the cultural systems with which to connect. - The seven mechanisms/arguments presented should
be further examined in relation to developing
institutional theory.
27References
- DiMaggio, P. J., Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron
cage revisited Institutional isomorphism and
collective rationality in organizational fields.
American Sociological Review, 48(2), 147-160. - Meyer, J. Rowan, B. (1991) Institutionalized
organizations Formal structure as myth - and ceremony. In Powell Dimaggio, The new
institutionalism in organizational analysis,
63-75.
28References
- Scott, W. Richard. (1991). "Unpacking
institutional arguments." Pp. 164-182 (Ch. 7) )
in Walter W. Powell and Paul J. DiMaggio (Eds.),
The New Institutionalism in Organizational
Analysis. Chicago The University of Chicago
Press. - Selznick, P. (1996). Institutionalism "Old" and
"New". Administrative Science Quarterly, 41(2),
270-277.