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How do we organize ourselves to accomplish shared goals? Martin Kornberger pursues experimental models of collective action to offer a new vocabulary and alternative strategies to address the significant challenges and crises of our times.
List of contents
- 1: Introduction: Collective Action in Crisis?
- Part I. Inventory: Modes of Collective Action
- 2: Invisible Hand Explanations: Emergence, Markets, and Collective Action
- 3: Visible Hand Explanations: Hierarchy, Management, and Collective Action
- 4: Institutional Explanations: Commons, Conventions, and Collective Action
- 5: Grassroot Explanations: Movements, Identity, and Collective Action
- Passage
- 6: Changing Landscapes, New Maps: Conditions of the Possibility for Distributed and Collective Action
- Part II. Discovery: Figures of Thought for Distributed and Collective Action
- 7: On Purpose: Concerns, Symbols, North Stars
- 8: Organizing the Open: Interface Design, Participatory Architectures, and Evaluative Infrastructures
- 9: Network Strategy: A Sense of Direction
- 10: Enter the Diplomat: Leading Distributed Collectives
- 11: In Conclusion: The 18th Camel
About the author
Martin Kornberger is Chair in Strategy and International Management at the University of Edinburgh and a research fellow at the Vienna University of Economics and Business. He has lived and worked in Australia (University of Technology Sydney as Associate Professor in Design and Management and as Research Director of the Australian Creative Industry Innovation Centre), Denmark (Copenhagen Business School as Professor of Strategy and Organization) and France (EM Lyon as Professor of Management Innovation). He has also been a Visiting Professor or Fellow at Stockholm University, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, and Aoyama Business School, Tokyo. With his philosophical background and rather eclectic bookshelf behind him, his work explores strategies for and organization of new forms of distributed collective action.
Summary
How do we organize ourselves to accomplish shared goals? Martin Kornberger pursues experimental models of collective action to offer a new vocabulary and alternative strategies to address the significant challenges and crises of our times.
Additional text
Strategies for Distributed and Collective Action shares many features of Gareth Morgan's well-known Images of Organization (1997), as it reminds us of the power of basic theoretical imageries anchored by vivid examples. But Kornberger dives more deeply into the foundational assumptions and epistemologies of different theoretical traditions, reanimating long-familiar arguments for seasoned readers and inviting graduate students to engage critically with classic texts and novel social phenomena. Each wave of theorizing about organization was grounded in the experience of specific episodes of sweeping social change or organizational innovation.