In The Social Psychology of Organizing, 2nd edition, Karl E. Weiek described an organizing theory based on flows, changes, connections, interdependence, and social interaction. This paper examined the definition and process of organizing proposed by Weick. The process of organizing and how organization emerges in Weick's book are discussed. Organizing was defined by Weick as a consensually validated grammar for reducing equivoeality by means of sensible interlocked behaviors. Weick showed that an organizing process comprised four elements : ecological change, enactment, selection, and retention. Organizations continuously manage some equivocalities, ignore others, and create new ones by interlocked behaviors and organizing processes. Equivo...
The paper accords signification or representation a decisive role in the context ofinstrumental acti...
The contemporary debate on the social ontological foundations of organization does not, for methodol...
Also CSST Working Paper #6.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51125/1/357.pd
K. E. Weick advocated understanding the organization phenomenon from the viewpoint of organizing in ...
Karl E. Weick’s The Social Psychology of Organizing has been one of the most influential books in or...
The purpose of this study is to discuss Weick's organization theory in connection withsocial constru...
A substantial portion of Karl Weick’s influence on organization studies is based upon his classic bo...
Organization is the explanandum that philosophical and scientific theories take into account for obj...
The explanation of reorganizing processes is a central problem in organization theory. Each of the d...
Process, Sensemaking, and Organizing is the first in a series of volumes which explore perspectives ...
This article builds on the theoretical notion that social order in organized settings is both emerge...
Over the last few decades the field of organization studies has expanded rapidly. It has come to co...
In this paper we rethink and reframe organizational learning in terms of organizational becoming. We...
How does action turn [into a] substantive and, if it does, how does it turn into action again to per...
The article is an attempt at presentation how basic notions and ferms used by sociology of organiza...
The paper accords signification or representation a decisive role in the context ofinstrumental acti...
The contemporary debate on the social ontological foundations of organization does not, for methodol...
Also CSST Working Paper #6.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51125/1/357.pd
K. E. Weick advocated understanding the organization phenomenon from the viewpoint of organizing in ...
Karl E. Weick’s The Social Psychology of Organizing has been one of the most influential books in or...
The purpose of this study is to discuss Weick's organization theory in connection withsocial constru...
A substantial portion of Karl Weick’s influence on organization studies is based upon his classic bo...
Organization is the explanandum that philosophical and scientific theories take into account for obj...
The explanation of reorganizing processes is a central problem in organization theory. Each of the d...
Process, Sensemaking, and Organizing is the first in a series of volumes which explore perspectives ...
This article builds on the theoretical notion that social order in organized settings is both emerge...
Over the last few decades the field of organization studies has expanded rapidly. It has come to co...
In this paper we rethink and reframe organizational learning in terms of organizational becoming. We...
How does action turn [into a] substantive and, if it does, how does it turn into action again to per...
The article is an attempt at presentation how basic notions and ferms used by sociology of organiza...
The paper accords signification or representation a decisive role in the context ofinstrumental acti...
The contemporary debate on the social ontological foundations of organization does not, for methodol...
Also CSST Working Paper #6.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51125/1/357.pd