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Action Research in Organizations

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This book examines organizational change processes based on collaboration between employers, employees, and action researchers in Europe and the United States. The authors offer important insights ...
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  • 14 December 2020
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Who decides to initiate change processes in organizations? Who sets the goals? What does it mean for employees to participate in change processes? The book examines organizational change processes based on collaboration between employers, employees and action researchers in Europe and the U.S. in the later part of the 20th century. The authors offer important insights into participation and change in organizations for researchers and practitioners by identifying dilemmas and paradoxes, conflicting interests and exercising of power.
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Price: $55.00
Pages: 328
Publisher: Verlag Barbara Budrich
Imprint: Verlag Barbara Budrich
Publication Date: 14 December 2020
Trim Size: 8.27 X 5.83 in
ISBN: 9783847424451
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Organizational Behavior

Marianne Kristiansen, Ph.d.,is a professor emerita at Aalborg University/Copenhagen, Denmark. Jørgen Bloch-Poulsen, Ph.d., is a senior lecturer at Copenhagen University, Denmark

Preface by Werner Fricke
Foreword
Introduction

Part I: Participation in organizational changes Chapter
1 An example of tensions and dilemmas in organizational action research ‘On the infinitely large in the infinitely small’ in Team Product Support What and why
1. Tensions between participation as involvement and/ or as co-determination
2. Tensions, positionings and the exercising of power
3. Experimental change of communication patterns in Team Product Support
4. Tensions between the smaller project context and larger organizational, societal and global agendas
5.Tensions in the management of organizational difference through dissensus Reflections

Chapter 2 A historical view of employee participation: four understandings What and why
1. Participation in working life: a mixed bag
2. Participation as industrial democracy
3. Two phases of participation as individualized involvement
4. Participation as autonomy 5. Some conclusions Reflections

Part II: An empathetic-critical view of participation in organizational action research in the twentieth century— From self-managing groups to co-generation of practical and theoretical change?

Chapter 3 Change-oriented social science: Early organizational action research in the USA in the 1940s What and why
1. Aims and perspectives
2. The Harwood studies: Action research at Harwood
3. The Harwood Experiments
4. Discussion of Lewin’s view of participation
5. Discussion of Lewin’s theory of change
6. Lewin’s view of action research: A philosophy of science perspective
7. Some conclusions Reflections

Chapter 4 The origin of socio-technical systems thinking— Studies at British coal mines in the 1950s What and why
1. Introduction and aims
2. The Tavistock group’s experiences before, during and after the Second World War
3. Initial studies at the Haighmoor mine
4. Follow-up studies in the Durham collieries
5. The new paradigm
6. Socially engaged accompanying research: between research ‘on’ and research ‘with’
7. Conclusion Reflections

Chapter 5 Industrial democracy: Experiments in Norway in the 1960s What and why
1. Introduction
2. Background: the democratic endeavour
3. Analysis of two field studies
4. A democratic paradox?
5. Discussion of NIDP as applied research
6. Conclusions Reflections

Chapter 6 Democratic dialogues—Dialogue conferences in Norway and Sweden in the 1980s What and why
1. Background
2. Aims and structure
3. The organization of democratic dialogic development processes
4. An example of democratic dialogue
5. Participation in the practical dimension of the research process: deliberation and decision
6. Deliberative democracy and democratic dialogues in organizations
7. Participation and exclusion
8. Exclusion of research from democratic dialogues?
9. Conclusions Reflections

Chapter 7 Pragmatic action research—Projects in Spanish cooperatives in the latter half of the 1980s What and why
1. Background
2. Aims and perspectives
3. A characterization of pragmatic action research
4. Organization of participatory action research in Fagor
5. Pragmatic action research as co-generative research
6. Is pragmatic action research a participatory, conventional, applied and/or phronetic science? 7.Conclusions Reflections

Chapter 8 Participation, past and future
1. Introduction
2. Differences and similarities between change-oriented social science, STS, NIDP, democratic dialogues and pragmatic action research
3. Action researchers’ exercising of power as silent discourse
4. Participation in the future?
5. A child of the Enlightenment?

Bibliography
Index