Source: Organizations: Theoretical Debates and the Scope of Organizational Theory, 2001, p. 1
“Organizational theories have three origins: Max Weber’s original work on bureaucracies which came to define the theory for sociologists, a line of theory based in business schools that had as its focus, the improvement of management control over the work process, and the industrial organization literature in economics. Unlike many fields in sociology, organizational theory has been a multidisciplinary affair since World War II, and it is difficult to understand its central debates without considering its linkages to business schools and economics departments.”
Source: Organizations: Theoretical Debates and the Scope of Organizational Theory, 2001, p. 1
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Neil Fligstein 40
American sociologist 1951Related quotes
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Source: The Human Side of Enterprise (1960), p. 18 (2006; 24)
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Source: Time, Structure and Fluctuations (1977), p. 1; Introduction.
“Organizational theory is based on a culture's answers to questions about the self.”
Danah Zohar (1997), Using the New Science to Rethink How We Structure and Lead Organizations. p. 96; cited in: Kathleen Manning (2013), Organizational Theory in Higher Education. p. 182.