The Legal Environments of Organizations
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Sociology
- Vol. 23 (1) , 479-515
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.soc.23.1.479
Abstract
Sociology has recently witnessed a rapprochement between research on organizations and research on law. This essay reviews a number of central developments and tendencies in this emerging literature, with a particular emphasis on the characteristics of law as an element of the organizational environment. We begin by distinguishing two metatheoretical perspectives on law and organizations: the materialist perspective, which portrays organizations as rational wealth-maximizers and sees the law as a system of substantive incentives and penalties; and the cultural perspective, which portrays organizations as cultural rule-followers and sees the law as a system of moral principles, scripted roles, and sacred symbols. Within each of these traditions, we examine three distinct facets of organizations' legal environments: the facilitative environment, in which law passively provides an arena for organizational action; the regulatory environment, in which law actively seeks to control organizational behavior; and the constitutive environment, in which law defines the basic building blocks of organizational forms and interorganizational relations. Finally, we distinguish between literature that sees law as an independent variable, determining organizational behavior; literature that sees law as a dependent variable, determined by organizational behavior; and a growing literature that discusses the endogeneity between law and organizations. Although any taxonomy tends to depict clear lines where they are in fact murky, we think that this approach not only provides a means of categorizing the literature on law and organizations, it also calls attention to the many different ways in which law and organizations are dynamically intertwined.Keywords
This publication has 129 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sanction Threats and Appeals to Morality: Testing a Rational Choice Model of Corporate CrimeLaw & Society Review, 1996
- Organizational Size and Change: Diversification in the Savings and Loan Industry after DeregulationAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1993
- Against SettlementThe Yale Law Journal, 1984
- The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational FieldsAmerican Sociological Review, 1983
- Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935Administrative Science Quarterly, 1983
- Dominant class interests and the emergence of antitrust legislationCrime, Law, and Social Change, 1979
- Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law: The Case of DivorceThe Yale Law Journal, 1979
- Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial TheoryAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1977
- Toward a More General Theory of RegulationThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1976
- The Problem of Social CostThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1960