The terms ‘evolution’ and ‘coevolution’ are widely used in organization studies but rarely defined. Often it is unclear whether they refer to single entities or populations. When specific evolutionary processes are suggested, the labelling is often misleading. For example, in the debate over the roles of individual adaptation and competitive selection, the ‘selectionist’ position of Michael Hannan and John Freeman (1989), which emphasizes the role of selection and stress the limits of individual firm adaptability, is often described as ‘Darwinian’ whereas opposing views that emphasise adaptability are described as ‘Lamarckian’. But these labels are not strictly dichotomous. Scholars have shown that core Darwinian principles, resulting from ...
The study of transformation and change is one of the most important areas of social science research...
I argue that research methodologies in organizational studies provide an example of cultural evoluti...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierDarwinism offers a...
In a recent article in this journal, Geoffrey Hodgson points out that the notion of 'evolution' is w...
Generalized Darwinism (GD) claims to be a conceptual and theoretical framework for researching evolu...
The business of this paper is to examine whether organizations ‘evolve’. In every-day language, it i...
How do social organizations evolve? How do they adapt to environmental pressures? What resources and...
This paper is motivated by the belief that the notion of ‘generalized Darwinism’ offers ameta-th...
The purpose of this paper is to provide a rigorous treatment of organizational learning as anevoluti...
Abstract How do social organizations evolve? How do they adapt to environmental pressures? What reso...
This thesis is a study of the use of Darwinian evolutionary ideas in business economics and organiza...
Reydon and Scholz raise doubts about the Darwinian status of organizational ecology by arguing that ...
Does evolutionary theory help, for a theory of the firm, or, more widely, a theory of organization? ...
The study of transformation and change is one of the most important areas of social science research...
Purpose \u2013 Recently, some biologists have argued that the time has come to replace separation be...
The study of transformation and change is one of the most important areas of social science research...
I argue that research methodologies in organizational studies provide an example of cultural evoluti...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierDarwinism offers a...
In a recent article in this journal, Geoffrey Hodgson points out that the notion of 'evolution' is w...
Generalized Darwinism (GD) claims to be a conceptual and theoretical framework for researching evolu...
The business of this paper is to examine whether organizations ‘evolve’. In every-day language, it i...
How do social organizations evolve? How do they adapt to environmental pressures? What resources and...
This paper is motivated by the belief that the notion of ‘generalized Darwinism’ offers ameta-th...
The purpose of this paper is to provide a rigorous treatment of organizational learning as anevoluti...
Abstract How do social organizations evolve? How do they adapt to environmental pressures? What reso...
This thesis is a study of the use of Darwinian evolutionary ideas in business economics and organiza...
Reydon and Scholz raise doubts about the Darwinian status of organizational ecology by arguing that ...
Does evolutionary theory help, for a theory of the firm, or, more widely, a theory of organization? ...
The study of transformation and change is one of the most important areas of social science research...
Purpose \u2013 Recently, some biologists have argued that the time has come to replace separation be...
The study of transformation and change is one of the most important areas of social science research...
I argue that research methodologies in organizational studies provide an example of cultural evoluti...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierDarwinism offers a...