Organizations and Citizenship
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organization
- Vol. 4 (1) , 75-92
- https://doi.org/10.1177/135050849741005
Abstract
This speculative article will attempt to employ contemporary debates around the politics of citizenship to theorize the problems and opportunities of new style management. Mission statements, post-bureaucratic organizations and excellent cultures have all been sponsored by business gurus as solutions to the problems of order and efficiency in complex organizations by capturing the hearts and minds of employees. I will suggest that some of these ideas contain formulations of the rights and obligations of `organizational citizens' which give a particular primacy to organizational affiliation. These notions may have particular resonance in states and societies in which it is suggested that the legitimacy of other communal attachments is weakening. I do not suggest that employees are uncritical about such attempts at normative manipulation, rather that the idea of working for an organization that is collectively believed in is a very seductive one. Indeed, this article suggests that some of the new management rhetoric and practice may have emancipatory possibilities. I would not deny that, in many organizations, its use is oriented to enhancing control strategies. Yet, if management are taking these ideas seriously, then this might require a radically different way of organizing that has the potential to restructure power relationships within the organization.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Conduct of Management and the Management of Conduct: Contemporary Managerial Discourse and the Constitution of the ‘Competent’ Manager*Journal of Management Studies, 1996
- Civil Society and Civil OrganizationsOrganization, 1996
- Making Managers Accountable or Making Managers?Educational Management & Administration, 1996
- Global Organization: From Imperialism to Ethical VisionOrganization, 1995
- Discourse and the Projection of Corporate Culture: The Mission StatementDiscourse & Society, 1995
- Reengineering History: Social Resonances and Business Process ReengineeringOrganization, 1994
- NATIONALISM AND CIVIL SOCIETY: DEMOCRACY, DIVERSITY AND SELF-DETERMINATIONInternational Sociology, 1993
- STRENGTH IS IGNORANCE; SLAVERY IS FREEDOM: MANAGING CULTURE IN MODERN ORGANIZATIONS*Journal of Management Studies, 1993
- Accounting expertise and the politics of the product: Economic citizenship and modes of corporate governanceAccounting, Organizations and Society, 1993
- Governing economic lifeEconomy and Society, 1990