Breaking the Bounds of Organization in Strategic Decision Making

This paper examines the exercise of power in organizational decision making. Four case studies are presented in the text and are analyzed in terms of the power plays of senior managers who were centrally involved in the decision-making process. In particular, the analysis distinguishes between bounded and unbounded decisions. In the former case the power plays of interests are constrained by preestablished organizational rules and procedures, while in the latter case unbounded decisions are relatively free from such organizational parameters and allow actors to exercise power selectively to secure their own interests. The data suggest that decisions may become unbounded in four ways: through unaccustomed forms of data, individual conflict, and novel topics for decision and where the problem is initiated from an unexpected or unusual source. Where decisions become unbounded the data suggest that those actors who are existing power holders through the control of critical contingencies are also able to take advantage of the rules and procedures of the institution to further their own interests.

[1]  Michael Aiken,et al.  Structural and Process Constraints on Influence in Organizations: A Level-Specific Analysis. , 1976 .

[2]  Robert A. Dahl,et al.  Who Governs: Democracy and Power in an American City. , 1961 .

[3]  Kurt Ernst Weil The anatomy of decisions , 1977 .

[4]  Geoffrey Nowell‐Smith,et al.  Selections from the prison notebooks of Antonio Gramsci , 2015 .

[5]  J. Pennings,et al.  A Strategic Contingencies' Theory of Intraorganizational Power , 1971 .

[6]  C. Perrow Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay , 1975 .

[7]  Anthony Giddens,et al.  The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies , 1974 .

[8]  Royston Greenwood,et al.  Power and Advantage in Organizations , 1981 .

[9]  John W. Meyer,et al.  Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[10]  J. Pennings Organizational strategy and change , 1985 .

[11]  Mayer N. Zald,et al.  Power in Organizations. , 1971 .

[12]  A. Pettigrew The politics of organizational decision-making , 1973 .

[13]  C. Offe,et al.  Political Authority and Class Structures – An Analysis of Late Capitalist Societies , 1972 .

[14]  Geoffrey R. Mallory,et al.  THE LIMITS OF TRADE UNION POWER IN ORGANISATIONAL DECISIONMAKING , 1982 .

[15]  E. E. Schattschneider The Semisovereign People: A Realist's View of Democracy in America , 1960 .

[16]  C. Mills The Sociological Imagination , 1959 .

[17]  James D. Thompson Organizations in Action: Social Science Bases of Administrative Theory , 1967 .

[18]  Eric Batstone Working Order: Workplace Industrial Relations over Two Decades , 1984 .

[19]  Alvin W. Gouldner,et al.  The Coming Crisis of Western Sociology , 1971 .

[20]  David C. Wilson,et al.  Electricity and Resistance: A Case Study of Innovation and Politics , 1982 .

[21]  S. Ranson The Structuring of Organizational Structures. , 1980 .

[22]  David C. Wilson,et al.  COMPLEXITY AND CLEAVAGE: DUAL EXPLANATIONS OF STRATEGIC DECISION‐MAKING [I] , 1982 .

[23]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  The Structure of "Unstructured" Decision Processes , 1976 .

[24]  J. Hage,et al.  Theories of Organizations: Form, Process, and Transformation. , 1982 .

[25]  J. McCann Strategies for Change: Logical Incrementalism , 1980 .

[26]  A. Pettigrew Information Control as a Power Resource , 1972 .

[27]  John B. Cullen,et al.  The International yearbook of organization studies 1979 , 1981 .

[28]  M. Crozier The Bureaucratic Phenomenon , 1964 .

[29]  Organization and environment : theory, issues and reality , 1980 .

[30]  S. Lukes Power: A Radical View , 1974 .

[31]  Stewart Clegg,et al.  Organization, Class And Control , 1981 .

[32]  G. Kenny,et al.  THE INTERDEPARTMENTAL INFLUENCE OF MANAGERS: INDIVIDUAL AND SUB‐UNIT PERSPECTIVES , 1984 .

[33]  P. A. Losty,et al.  A Behavioural Theory of the Firm , 1965 .

[34]  J. Pennings,et al.  Structural conditions of intraorganizational power , 1974 .

[35]  A. Epstein,et al.  The craft of social anthropology , 1968 .

[36]  R. C. Hodgson,et al.  The Executive Role Constellation. , 1966 .

[37]  T. Benton `Objective' Interests and the Sociology of Power , 1981 .

[38]  Peter Bachrach,et al.  Power and Poverty: Theory and Practice , 1970 .

[39]  H. Shepard,et al.  Men Who Manage , 1959 .

[40]  J. March,et al.  Financial Adversity, Internal Competition, and Curriculum Change in a University. , 1978 .

[41]  D. Silverman,et al.  The Structure of Organizations. , 1971 .

[42]  D. M. White The Problem of Power , 1972, British Journal of Political Science.

[43]  MANAGERIALLY PERCEIVED INFLUENCE OVER INTRADEPARTMENTAL DECISIONS , 1985 .

[44]  Stewart Clegg,et al.  The Theory of Power and Organization , 1979 .