This chapter explores the management and organization studies (MOS) literature concerned with the relationships between identity, space and place. We define identity-related terms and highlight the principal ways in which space is conceptualized in MOS. We then examine three categories of empirical and theoretical studies linking organized space and processes of identity and identification: workspaces designed to enable highly interactive modes of working; homes, where work is increasingly taking up residence; and spaces that facilitate identity change in ways unanticipated by managements. We then make suggestions for future research and conclude by highlighting the powerful dynamic reciprocal connections between space and individual and or...
Careers and work identities do not solely evolve in single organizations. Instead, they take shape i...
The rise of innovative and whimsical workspaces like Google’s offices (Myerson & Ross, 2003; Schmidt...
Over the last decades, many social scientists have diagnosed a 'disappearance of space' (Paul Virili...
This chapter explores the management and organization studies (MOS) literature concerned with the re...
Based on thirty interviews conducted in ten coworking spaces in Amsterdam and Paris, we ask whether ...
This paper aims to contribute to, and extend, the emergent Sociology of organizational space. It eng...
The past decade has experienced an increase in the number of studies on organizational space or wher...
The past decade has experienced an increase in the number of studies on organizational space or wher...
Drawing on interdisciplinary concepts of physical space as a way of understanding and framing organi...
In line with the spatial turn in management and organization studies, this paper aims at investigati...
In an extension of organizational identity research, we draw on place identity theory (PIT) to argue...
This paper presents an integrated framework for studying organizational spaces. It suggests that exi...
The effect that our physical surroundings have on our thoughts and behaviours is often neglected in ...
This paper aims at contributing to the study of intersections by focusing on the simultaneous accomp...
Work organisations are made by the arrangement of space and working lives are made and lived through...
Careers and work identities do not solely evolve in single organizations. Instead, they take shape i...
The rise of innovative and whimsical workspaces like Google’s offices (Myerson & Ross, 2003; Schmidt...
Over the last decades, many social scientists have diagnosed a 'disappearance of space' (Paul Virili...
This chapter explores the management and organization studies (MOS) literature concerned with the re...
Based on thirty interviews conducted in ten coworking spaces in Amsterdam and Paris, we ask whether ...
This paper aims to contribute to, and extend, the emergent Sociology of organizational space. It eng...
The past decade has experienced an increase in the number of studies on organizational space or wher...
The past decade has experienced an increase in the number of studies on organizational space or wher...
Drawing on interdisciplinary concepts of physical space as a way of understanding and framing organi...
In line with the spatial turn in management and organization studies, this paper aims at investigati...
In an extension of organizational identity research, we draw on place identity theory (PIT) to argue...
This paper presents an integrated framework for studying organizational spaces. It suggests that exi...
The effect that our physical surroundings have on our thoughts and behaviours is often neglected in ...
This paper aims at contributing to the study of intersections by focusing on the simultaneous accomp...
Work organisations are made by the arrangement of space and working lives are made and lived through...
Careers and work identities do not solely evolve in single organizations. Instead, they take shape i...
The rise of innovative and whimsical workspaces like Google’s offices (Myerson & Ross, 2003; Schmidt...
Over the last decades, many social scientists have diagnosed a 'disappearance of space' (Paul Virili...