In Search of Modernization: The Negotiation of Social Identity in Organizational Reform
- 1 July 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organization Studies
- Vol. 25 (6) , 947-968
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0170840604040677
Abstract
Based on the analysis of two short documents, this article considers how social categories, such as bureaucracy, council, business, and so on, are utilized in descriptions of project work. Specifically, it examines the locally occasioned interpretative practices that enabled a single project (in a UK local authority) to be described as modernizing the way services were delivered. In part, this involved negotiating the category ‘bureaucratic’, with the author often reasoning it would be somehow misleading to use such a category to describe the project. The article focuses on the negotiation of social categories and on the work done to present aspects of the project as ‘documents’ (Garfinkel 1967) of the authority’s category membership, as ‘in keeping’ with what would be expected of such a type. Categorization, the act of tying specific events to social types or categories, is shown to be a significant resource in accounting for the character of project work. The article adds to debates on organizational identity and public-sector reform by examining members’ commonsense knowledge of various social categories and by illustrating the role of categorization in shaping how various organizational phenomena are understood.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enterprise Discourse, Professional Identity and the Organizational Control of Hospital CliniciansOrganization Studies, 2002
- Narratives of Organizational Identity and Identification: A Case Study of Hegemony and ResistanceOrganization Studies, 2002
- The reconsidered model of membership categorization analysisQualitative Research, 2002
- On the Discursive Construction of Success/Failure in Narratives of Post-Merger IntegrationOrganization Studies, 2002
- Trust, Control and Post-BureaucracyOrganization Studies, 2001
- Narrative Infrastructure in Product Creation ProcessesOrganization, 2000
- Enterprise and its Futures: A Response to Fournier and GreyOrganization, 2000
- Too Much, Too Little and Too Often: A Critique of du Gay's Analysis of EnterpriseOrganization, 1999
- Generating Applause: A Study of Rhetoric and Response at Party Political ConferencesAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1986
- Two Axes for the Analysis of ‘Commonsense’ and ‘Formal’ Geographical Knowledge in Classroom TalkBritish Journal of Sociology of Education, 1984