Archive for ‘conference’

Feb 15
By SnO - Post on 2012 February 15 - No Comments - conference
The “European Theory Development Workshop in OMT” will be organized on June.28 and June.29  jointly by GEM, HEC SnO research center,and Sciences Po CSO research center.
Thursday, 28thJune from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm: the pre-workshop mini conference will be organized around presentations (empirical and theoretical papers) from some of the participants and guests with their latest ongoing work. On Thursday night we will have our social event in a “mountain restaurant”.
Friday, 29th June from 9:00 to 6:00 pm we will have the workshop with 3 to 4 parallel sessions and a maximum of 24 papers. We will finish our workshop by a session of wine testing from 6.30 to 8:00 pm.
A slot of one hour will be dedicated to each paper: 15 to 20 minutes of presentation and 40 to 45 minutes of commentary and discussion with some of the best and experienced editors in our field.
Scientific Committee:
Frank de Bakker (VU Amsterdam)
Henri Bergeron (Sciences Po Paris, CSO)
Joep Cornelissen (VU Amsterdam)
David Courpasson (EM Lyon)
Rick Delbridge (Cardiff Business school)
Issy Drori (The College of Management Academic Studies, Tel Aviv & Michigan Ann Arbor)
Rodolphe Durand (HEC)
Peer Fiss (USC, Marshall School of Business)
Frank den Hond (VU Amsterdam)
Bernard Leca (IAE de Lille)
Vincent Mangematin (Grenoble Ecole de Management)
Kamal Munir (Judge Business School, Cambridge)
David Seidl (University of Zurich)
André Spicer (Cass Business School)
Roy Suddaby (Alberta School of Business)
Hugh Willmott (Cardiff Business School)
Organizing committee:
Patrick Castel (Sciences Po Paris, CSO)
Damon Golsorkhi (Grenoble Ecole de Management)
Marie-Pierre Kraus (Grenoble Ecole de Management)
Carlos Ramirez (HEC)

The “European Theory Development Workshop in OMT” will be organized on June 28th and June 29th  jointly by GEM, HEC SnO research center, and Sciences Po CSO research center.

Thursday, 28thJune from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm: the pre-workshop mini conference will be organized around presentations (empirical and theoretical papers) from some of the participants and guests with their latest ongoing work. On Thursday night we will have our social event in a “mountain restaurant”.

Friday, 29th June from 9:00 to 6:00 pm we will have the workshop with 3 to 4 parallel sessions and a maximum of 24 papers. We will finish our workshop by a session of wine testing from 6.30 to 8:00 pm.

A slot of one hour will be dedicated to each paper: 15 to 20 minutes of presentation and 40 to 45 minutes of commentary and discussion with some of the best and experienced editors in our field.


Scientific Committee:

Frank de Bakker (VU Amsterdam)

Henri Bergeron (Sciences Po Paris, CSO)

Joep Cornelissen (VU Amsterdam)

David Courpasson (EM Lyon)

Rick Delbridge (Cardiff Business school)

Issy Drori (The College of Management Academic Studies, Tel Aviv & Michigan Ann Arbor)

Rodolphe Durand (HEC)

Peer Fiss (USC, Marshall School of Business)

Frank den Hond (VU Amsterdam)

Bernard Leca (IAE de Lille)

Vincent Mangematin (Grenoble Ecole de Management)

Kamal Munir (Judge Business School, Cambridge)

David Seidl (University of Zurich)

André Spicer (Cass Business School)

Roy Suddaby (Alberta School of Business)

Hugh Willmott (Cardiff Business School)


Organizing committee:

Patrick Castel (Sciences Po Paris, CSO)

Damon Golsorkhi (Grenoble Ecole de Management)

Marie-Pierre Kraus (Grenoble Ecole de Management)

Carlos Ramirez (HEC)

Feb 15
By SnO - Post on 2012 February 15 - No Comments - conference

We are pleased to provide the link for the podcast of “Socially Responsible Investments & European Sovereign Debt Crises” conference, which took place at the beginning of this academic year, on October 10th, 2011. Please click on the following link to access the podcast:

http://itunes.apple.com/fr/itunes-u/socially-responsible-investments/id496802590

This conference organized by the Accounting and Control Department and the MSc in Sustainable Development of HEC Paris during the 2011 October FrenchSIF week for Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) aims to explore SRI in a broad sense and the potential role of non-financial criteria in the management of sovereign bonds. Indeed, the precarious situation of the sovereign debt market has driven changes in the political agenda of many European countries, often driven by the balance of payment and debt situation of the respective national governments. Analysis of social and environmental sustainability of countries and the related rankings offer a potential alternative to mainstream and dominantly financial analysis of sovereign bonds. Some of the questions to be addressed in this conference are: – What are the possible relationships between (the lack of) environmental, social and governance sustainability and the current debt crisis? – Could attention to environmental and social sustainability in the investment process contribute to minimizing the probability and/or risk of future debt crises? – What are the political and technical barriers to integration of environmental and social factors in the sovereign debt investment processes and products?

Sep 29
By SnO - Post on 2011 September 29 - No Comments - conference

The Accounting and Control Department and the MSc in Sustainable Development invite you to a conference:

Socially Responsible Investments:

A Tool for Preventing Future European Sovereign Debt Crises?

With the participation of

Daniel Beunza

Lecturer, London School of Economics

Olivier Bonnet

Head of SRI, Etablissement de Retraite Additionnelle de la Fonction Publique (ERAFP)

Oliver Rüter

Research Director, Oekom Research AG

October 10th 2011

17h to 19h – Room H303 (Campus Jouy-en-Josas)

The event will be followed by a cocktail and available as podcast on http://itunes.hec.edu.

The conference is open to public: students, academics and professionals are welcomed.

The precarious situation of the sovereign debt market has driven changes in the political agenda of many European countries, often driven by the balance of payment and debt situation of the respective national governments. Analysis of social and environmental sustainability of countries and the related rankings offer a potential alternative to mainstream and dominantly financial analysis of sovereign bonds. The objective of the conference is to explore Socially Responsible Investments (SRI) in a broad sense and the potential role of non-financial criteria in the management of sovereign bonds. Some of the questions to be addressed in this conference are:

  • What are the possible relationships between (the lack of) environmental, social and governance sustainability and the current debt crisis?
  • Could attention to environmental and social sustainability in the investment process contribute to minimizing the probability and/or risk of future debt crises?
  • What are the political and technical barriers to integration of environmental and social factors in the sovereign debt investment processes and products?

Contacts:

Diane-Laure Arjaliès (arjalies@hec.fr)
Raul Barroso (barroso@hec.fr)
Afshin Mehrpouya (mehrpouya@hec.fr

Read announcement here.

May 18
By SnO - Post on 2011 May 18 - No Comments - call for papers, conference

In 2012 the Max Planck Society and Sciences Po Paris will jointly establish the Max Planck Sciences Po Center on Coping with Instability in Market Societies, a German-French center in the social sciences. To launch this project and gain insight into the topic the center addresses, the two partners are organizing a conference in Paris on December 15– 16, 2011, entitled “Coping with Instability in Market Societies.” They invite researchers working on aspects of this phenomenon to submit proposals by June 15, 2011.

The Conference Subject

The last thirty years have seen profound shifts in the social organization of Western so- cieties. Today individuals are increasingly exposed to market forces in a growing num- ber of life spheres. Cultural shifts that accompanied this “marketization” have led to a more individualized culture and the destabilization of traditional social structures, for instance in the family. Creating a growing sense of uncertainty, these developments have led to pressures on individuals, organizations, and politics to cope with increasingly in- stable economic, social, and political environments.

In the economy amplified instability can be observed for instance in labor markets, where unstable labor relations have increased, or in public services such as health care and edu- cation, which are increasingly organized as quasi-markets today. In society, detradition- alization is reflected in the family in rising divorce rates and a greater variety of family types, and in contemporary society at large in a growing ethnic and religious heterogeneity due to increased immigration. The political system of Western democracies has witnessed the erosion of stable party systems, the decline of formal participation, and the multiplication of governance structures and levels of authority. From the changes in the economy and social life, new political instabilities arise and lead to conflicts and protest.

While these transformation processes are already well studied in the social sciences, the consequences of these multiple forms of instability have yet to be examined systematical- ly. What strategies do individuals, organizations, and the political system employ to cope with uncertainty and instability? How do the economy, social life, and politics adapt in response to the uncertainty actors and institutions are facing?

The effects of these developments are clearly multifaceted. The literature argues, for instance, that although market forces may destroy traditional social structures (Polanyi), markets may also create new relations and social groups (Hirschman). On the societal level the detraditionalization of family relations and greater flexibility in life-course choices have opened tremendous opportunities for individuals; at the same time these developments have often caused insecurity and new needs to adapt rapidly to changing life situations. The coping strategies through which the individuals adjust to less stable life-worlds can themselves trigger new unforeseen risks and uncertainties in other socie- tal spheres. For example: (1) If increasing demands for flexibility on the labor market, the economic need for employment of both partners, and the attraction of women to the labor market lead to decreasing fertility rates in middle-class families, the state needs to react by introducing expensive policies to provide institutional support to middle-class families – with uncertain success. (2) In Great Britain and the United States reductions in welfare state provisions went along with an increase in the availability of consumer credit and the expansion of home mortgages, exposing not only individuals to the risks of not being able to pay back these loans but also contributing to the real estate bubble that triggered the financial crisis in 2007.

Coping with instability does not necessarily have to be limited to the adaptation of indi- vidual decisions but can also be manifested in collective action, which is an attempt to reduce uncertainty for specific social groups and shift risks to others. Political conflicts about access for underprivileged social groups to (elite) institutions of higher education, migration policies, or estate taxation are political controversies about the distribution of uncertainty within society.

For further details on the submission process, please read the call for papers.

Mar 25
By SnO - Post on 2011 March 25 - No Comments - conference, seminar

We are glad to announce that the website of the Conference on Coordination within and among Organizations is now online.

The conference, co-organized by HEC Paris (Society and Organizations), Administrative Science Quarterly, and the Organization and Management Theory division (OMT) of the Academy of Management, will be held on HEC Paris’ campus June 13-14, 2011.

The site provides the program of the conference, as well as practical information and a registration section.

Jan 19
By SnO - Post on 2011 January 19 - No Comments - conference, summer School

Beyond Performance: Business Sustainability in question

nyu hec alma

We are pleased to announce the organization of the 3rd edition of the Medici Summer School in Management Studies for doctoral students and young researchers which will be held in Florence, June 5-10, 2011. The school is sponsored in collaboration with organizing faculty from Alma GS (University of Bologna), HEC Paris (Society and Organizations Research Center and the HEC Foundation), and Stern School of Business (New York University).

Mission

The Summer School is designed to promote doctoral education and research in management studies and contribute to the development of enlightened practice in the management of business organizations. The Medici Summer School advocates a special focus on cross-fertilizing research across US and Europe traditions. The Summer School is a unique educational program for qualified doctoral students interacting with thought leaders in the management field who have shared their knowledge and wisdom on frontier research topics.

The Medici School combines lectures and research seminars by prominent international scholars with an active engagement of participant students. Every day of the one-week program is scheduled to end with the presentation of students’ work related to the topic of the School, with a panel of senior faculty providing feedback. There is no fee to participate. Selected candidates will be fully covered in their accommodation expenses provided that they stay the full week. Note that transportation is not covered by the organizers.

The Summer School will begin on Sunday June 5th with a welcoming reception and will conclude the afternoon of June 10th.

Theme

The program of “The 2011 Medici Summer School in Management Studies” will focus on Business Sustainability, more precisely on the conciliation or antagonism between performance and business sustainability.

Companies face today more than ever the daunting challenge of over-performing their rivals AND meeting the demanding requirements of “sustainable development”. Articulating the logics that underpin a resistant alloy between economic interest and compulsory concerns for natural and social resources is a challenge for practice. It is a challenge for research too. Over the past decade, research investigated the links between ‘greenness’ or ‘corporate social responsibility’ and ‘performance’. Taking stock of the search for normative associations between these factors, research has evolved today into a new series of interests, which the Medici School will explore this year.

On the aftermath of traumatic events in the late 70s and the 80s (Seveso, Three Mile Island, Bhopal, Chernobyl, Exxon Valdez to cite a few), firms understood that they had to comply with certain amounts of norms and rules, some imposed by States and other self-defined by their industries for instance. However, the very function of environmental management has long been ancillary to more regular strategic and economic issues. Over the more recent period and the development of an economics of intangible assets, reputation and legitimacy happened to capture stakeholders’ attention. More global concerns mounted in favor of Earth preservation, in defense against how human activity affected climatic change, and the looming challenge of human exploitation in resourceful but ill-equipped countries. Being green or considerate for other interests (social, community, or nature itself) started to be associated with reputation building and gaining legitimacy –which markets value positively as well.

We will start our journey by reflecting upon the associations that does or does not exist between engaging in sustainable business activities and performance. Does it pay to engage in such activities as an early mover or latecomer? Or at all when more and more companies publish reports on their corporate activities targeted at healing these concerns? Is it the right question to ask after all? Shouldn’t we bypass this simplistic question and engage in more fundamental ones?

For instance, we aim at pointing how much managerial cognition and social psychology can explain why some companies engage in more sustainable activities than others. Deciding to pursue sustainability goals opens up a new way of viewing the world for managers and employees alike, potentially altering mental models or schemas and causing shifts in how attention is focused. We will explore some of the possible changes in cognition that might be associated with a focus on sustainability as well as how these cognitive changes might result in innovation. For example, what “organizational space” can a focus on sustainability open up for front line employees and middle-level managers? We will also consider how a focus on sustainability might alter how employees think about their relationships with their employers. Finally, we will examine the potential for other research opportunities in OB and OT.

Also, other relationships exist at the business level vis-à-vis the sustainability issues. How do managers and firm perceive the trade-offs between their immediate objectives and the longer-term considerations brought about by environmental and societal stakes? How to reconcile different time spans? What are the practices that in different industries enable firms to articulate business level strategy, competitive advantage, and business sustainability?

Not only business sustainability matters at the business entity level. Firms, as corporations possess often multiple business lines and may be present in multiple geographies. What does research say about the corporate level implications of business sustainability? Is there any transferability of practices across divisions? Can an advantage be replicated in another geography? What is the right level of analysis within firms and across geographies to analyze, understand, and profess about business sustainability?

Finally, among many other possible issues of interest, one critical factor that explains why an entire Medici School is devoted to this subject is the tremendous influence that third party organizations played over the recent period to popularize the fundamental issues at stake today. Consumer associations, producer unions, NGOs, and activists all transformed the competitive environment within which firms compete. Hence, a close look at how social forces and institutional pressures constrain and can be used by firms and organizations is necessary to supersede the mere alleged association between business sustainability and performance.
Program

The goal of the Summer School is to bring together leading strategy and organizations scholars to explore these and other issues during the week we will be together. A typical day will feature a faculty member presenting the gist of the research during the morning and working with student participants in the afternoon to flesh out and develop key questions, both theoretically and empirically. This will be done by:
1. Exposing students to the cutting edge of research in this area.
2. Sharing with students some of their own recent work on related topics.
3. Offering their best advice on how to tackle complex questions of both theory and research on business sustainability.

Part of each day will be devoted to student presentations of their own ideas and relevant research projects so that feedback from peers and from faculty can be elicited. Each faculty member will be in residence at the School for at least a few days, allowing ample time for one-to-one sessions, knowledge sharing, and networking opportunities.

The five days of the Summer School will be tentatively organized as follows:

  • Day 1: Beyond performance and advantage. Rodolphe Durand, GDF-Suez Professor in Business & Sustainability, Strategy department, HEC Paris.
  • Day 2: Sustainability, Cognition, and Innovation: Opportunities in OT and OB? Frances Milliken, Professor of Management and Organizations, Stern School of Business, New York University
  • Day 3: Business Strategy and sustainable business: New research challenges, Tima Bansal, Professor, Executive Director, Network for Business Sustainability, and Director of the Center for Building Sustainable Value, Ivey School of Business, University of Western Ontario
  • Day 4: Corporate strategy and sustainable business, Michael Russo, Lundquist Professor of Sustainable Management, University of Oregon
  • Day 5: Social and institutional forces, business sustainability, and performance. Klaus Weber, Associate Professor of Management and Organization, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University

Application procedure

The School will admit 20-25 student participants. Applications for these slots are welcomed from current Ph.D. students in Management and related disciplines from universities worldwide. Students for the Summer School will be selected in accordance with the quality of their doctoral curricula, research interests, and application materials.

There is no application or participation fee. Student participants will be responsible for covering their own long distance travel expenses to and from Florence, but the Summer School will cover all accommodation and board expenses during the week of sessions provided that students attend the entire week. Applications should include:

a. A simple statement declaring that the applicant is interested in being considered for admission to the Summer School together with the applicant’s contact information: email address, telephone, and mailing address. All of this should be in the body of an email sent to the address below.
b. Updated curriculum vitae listing educational background, Ph.D. program, nationality, etc.
c. A motivation letter (no longer than 1 page) clearly indicating the applicant’s current research activities and his/her specific interest in the topic of the 2010 Summer School.
d. A brief recommendation from a member of their dissertation committee
e. Applicants are also encouraged (but not required) to submit an extended abstract or discussion note that he/she will present during the Summer School. The Selection Committee will evaluate the relevance of this paper to the 2011 School theme.

All application materials should be sent exclusively via email to the following address: application@medicisummerschool.it

For any specific inquiry or clarification please contact: medicischool2011@gmail.com

The deadline for applications is April 15, 2011. Admitted candidates will be notified by May 1st. A waiting list of other candidates will be established.

(This document is available in pdf format here)

Nov 19
By SnO - Post on 2010 November 19 - 1 Comment - call for papers, conference, seminar

ASQ          HEC, Paris          OMT division

June 13-14 2011, in Paris

Coordination has long been seen as an integral part of the fields of organizational theory and strategy. It has been with ASQ from the start, as the initial issue contained articles by Litchfield, Dale, Parsons, Thompson, and Berliner that all raised the issue of coordination within the organization either in its full form or in a narrower conception of coordination and control. 16 years later, ASQ was instrumental in launching resource dependence theory, with its focus on inter-organizational dependence and coordination, and an early entrant in the move of organizational theorists into inter-organizational relations.

Given this history, it seems suitable that ASQ hold a conference to further develop research on coordination within and among organizations. The usefulness of such a conference is especially high because the field may need some revitalization. Work on hierarchical control in organizations has produced useful findings, but is less relevant to issues of horizontal coordination in organizations or coordination among organizations. Work on the effects of structures that have a role in coordination (such as networks) has significantly advanced our knowledge, but has come to a point in which more work on coordination activities is needed. Thus the time has come to encourage research that advances thinking and produces new evidence on coordination activities.

Therefore, this conference seeks to gather contributions coming from different perspectives that provide both theoretical and empirical content to the central topic of coordination between and across organizations. Perspectives include theories of control, bureaucracy, roles and functions, inter-organizational relationships, resource-dependence, this list being non-exhaustive. Examples of phenomena of interest are coordination activities, governing institutions, permanence (or not) of structures, diffusion and translation of coordination, impact of trans-organizational coordination mechanisms on performance, legitimacy, or norms. For example, how are information and communication technologies used in organizational coordination? What structures and activities do organizations put in place to coordinate inter-organizational collaborations?

The conference will be held as a developmental conference, so each paper will have a senior scholar as a discussant, as well as receive feedback from peers with overlapping research interests. Thus, it is of special interest for colleagues recently graduated from their Ph.D. with manuscripts under development. It is most suitable for papers that are based on research that has come far along, but would benefit from presentation, commentary, and discussion. Thus, papers should fit the conference theme and the stage of development. Selection of papers will be done through submission of extended abstracts (4-5 pages) to an organizing committee that includes members of the ASQ editorial board, HEC Paris, and the OMT division.

ASQ, the leading North-American journal in organizational theory and management, is delighted to organize jointly this conference, the first of its kind, with a European institution. It is intended to help the intellectual exchange between European scholars of organization theory and their peers in the US and elsewhere. It is part of the conference initiatives sponsored by HEC’s “Society and Organizations” Research Center in the recent years, such as the Medici Summer School and the Workshop on social movement in June 2010, events that help and ease trans-Atlantic dialogue. It is an important goal of the OMT Division of the Academy of Management to develop the young scholars and Ph.D. students of the division through mini conferences, and OMT sees support of this conference as the start of a series of mentoring conferences.

HEC, Paris will host the event and sponsor participant accommodations and meals. The OMT division will sponsor travel for up to 5 PhD students, advanced in their research, who can attend the conference. The conference will consist of around 40 young faculty and student participants and senior colleagues who will discuss papers and offer developmental advice. The atmosphere is expected to be collegial, informal, but centered on making working papers progress and deepening our understanding of coordination within and across organizations. ASQ’s editorial team will discuss the “Do’s and Don’ts” of top publications and share their experience of the publication process.

Deadline for submissions: January 30 2011

Contacts for questions on the conference and submission of abstracts:

Henrich R. Greve, henrich.greve@insead.edu
Rodolphe Durand, durand@hec.fr

Jun 28
By SnO - Post on 2010 June 28 - No Comments - conference

Closing a series of seminars dedicated to Collective Action, Strategy, and Practice[1], the first annual Society and Organizations workshop was held June 25, 2010. HEC Paris had the great honor to welcome some of the world leading scholars in Organization Theory and Sociology and contribute to the advance of research in Social Movements, New Institutional Theory, and Routine Dynamics.

The workshop received the support of the Society and Organizations research center (SnO), funded by the HEC Foundation. Building on a wide range of competences and disciplines, the SnO research center was created in 2009 to investigate both the society-related issues that organizations face and the organizational issues that society experiences.

The conference was made up of 5 sessions. Each guest speaker presented a paper (40/45 min) and was challenged by a prominent international scholar playing the role of provocateur, discussing and engaging the conversation with the audience (15/20 min).

Relating Routine Dynamics to Dynamic Capabilities: Learning About Routines Meets Learning Through Routines

Martha s. Feldman (U. of California, Irvine) - Provocateur: David Seidl (Zurich U.)

Opening the conference, Martha Feldman invited the participants to think about the importance of routines – the basic building blocks of organizing – in social movements. Social movement organizations engage routines to mobilize, recruit, protest, and make decisions. They need to change routines, when their membership or the environment evolves (e.g., when they succeed), and develop various routines to compete and cooperate with others. In the routine dynamics view, routines are considered as “generative systems”: parts of routines interact in a dynamic way, producing both stability (“same” routine) and change (“different” routine). Complementing the dynamic capabilities view, that mostly focuses on exogenous change, the routine dynamics perspective opens the “black box” of routines, emphasizing not only how one can learn about routines but also learn through routines. It also encourages looking at a broad range of routines rather than routines narrowly focused on production.

Setting the provocateur routine for the day, David Seidl questioned the concept of routine: what exactly are routines and what question does the routine concept help to answer? He also pointed out that the routine dynamics and the dynamic routines views adopt different perspective and ontological assumptions that make their integration problematic.

Under Pressure: Community Amplification of Protest and Corporate Response

Michael Lounsbury (U. of Alberta) - Provocateur: Julie Battilana (HBS)

Michael Lounsbury discussed the traditional institutional approach of structuration dynamics by introducing a community-based perspective of anti-toxics protests. Developing the under-theorized concept of institutional pressure, Lee and Lounsbury investigate how local activism affects community factors  (social capital, social movement organizations’ resources), intensifying or weakening pressures on organizations. In doing so, they explore how protest and civic engagement affect the building of healthy communities. Using data on toxic releases of 118 facilities from 35 communities in Texas and Louisiana (1991-2003), they study the moderating effects of community resources (social capital vs. material/ organizational resources) on activism aimed at altering corporate polluting behavior. Results reveal that community-level social capital has robust direct effects on polluters’ behavior, suggesting that community level norms have a crucial effect on polluting organizations even in the absence of activism. They find that activism and organizational infrastructures are important for communities with medium social capital, but appear ineffective in case of either low social capital or high social capital.

As provocateur, Julie Battilana chiefly emphasized the diversity and heterogeneity of protests, which may also determine their direct effect on pollution. The audience raised several stimulating questions, mostly related to the boundaries of communities, potential spillover effects across communities (at national and transnational levels), and the sources of social capital.

Laws of Attraction: Regulatory Arbitrage in the Face of Activism in Right to Work States

Hayagreeva Rao (Stanford U.) - Provocateur: Erhard Friedberg (Sciences Po)

Social movement protesters and firms can be regarded as actors that strategically interact. In their study of Wal-Mart store openings (1997-2008), Rao, Yue and Ingram find strong evidence that Wal-Mart takes into account protesters’ regulatory opportunities when selecting new store locations. Focusing on regulatory differences across State borders in the United States, they observe that Wal-Mart, a non-unionized firm, is more likely to issue proposals to open new stores, and then to actually open new stores, within the borders of states with Right-to-Work (anti-union) laws when compared to similar areas where such regulations do not apply. In the triad formed by the firm, the protesters, and the local government, jurisdictional competition shifts power to firms, which appear to be more responsive than activists to regulatory arbitrage.

The triadic model of domain consensus helps shedding light on the interplay between social movements and target firms. However, as Erhard Friedberg remarked, activist groups might not be homogenous. They actually include a large variety of individuals and organizations with various backgrounds and goals that a more qualitative design may contribute to understand better. Additionally, the research setting reveals a puzzle: knowing that legislative heterogeneity empowers firms at the expense of society, why state regulations do not converge?

The Consequences of Boundary Spanning: Repression and Disbanding of US Women’s protest Organizations

Sarah Soule (Stanford U.) - Provocateur: Frank den Hond (VU U., Amsterdam)

Past research has shown that actors spanning social categories (e.g., stock brokers’ classifications, movies genres) can be subject to various penalties. Not only do they tend to spread themselves and cannot thus perform optimally, but they also loose some of the attention of their primary audiences that have trouble understanding what they actually do. Would such finding hold when applied at protest organizations? That is the question raised by Fassiotto and Soule when investigating women protests in the United States (1960-1995). They find that events that incorporate several claims or unite different protest groups tend to lead to more women arrests by police forces. In addition, protest organizations involved in such events have a lower likelihood of protesting in the future.  The results suggest that, like for-profit actors, social movements actors and organizations may also be penalized for category spanning at both the event level (claims) and the organizational level (protest groups). As a result, movement coalitions may not always work.

The provocateur Frank den Hond reminded the audience that hybrid identities may fail, but sometimes also work (e.g., the SUV segment in the automobile market). He pointed out that the boundaries of the unit of analysis (a protest organization) needed to be carefully defined to avoid artifacts that may bias the observed results. Several questions were also raised in the audience. Aren’t there occasions where police arrests are beneficial to movements, as they attract the attention of the media? And isn’t increased repression a result of the political nature of protests involving more than one claim or one group or, alternatively, a consequence of the inherent lower level of group control in such protests?

When Movements Do Not Innovate

Francesca Polletta (U. of California, Irvine) - Provocateur: Quy Huy (INSEAD)

Francesca Polletta held the final session, introducing an exciting topic: when movements do not innovate. She discussed the prevailing view of social movement theory, traditionally useful to understand institutional change, which sheds light on the cultural obstacles preventing movements from innovating. Studying participatory democracy in six movement organizations and one multi-organizational coalition, she suggested that even when decision-making rules have proven counterproductive, founders didn’t modify them because this change would have jeopardized the very meaning of the relationships. As a result, social movements fail to innovate because activists are more invested in maintaining the integrity of relationships (e.g., friendship) than in preserving other schemas (e.g., participatory democracy as a new form of organization).

Concluding the day, Quy Huy stressed the narrative and emotional dimensions of movements, and the fruitful avenues for future research lying in their incorporation into social movement theory: do emotional investments always lead to dysfunctional inertia or can they be constructive under some circumstances? What criteria should we use to evaluate what is dysfunctional or constructive? Is it possible to modify emotional investments? The audience completed these suggestions arguing that analyzing successful cases of participatory democracy would be a great contribution to a failure-biased literature.

Report by Julien Jourdan & Lionel Paollella, HEC Paris


[1] Seminars co-organized by Rouen Business School (Damon Golsorkhi and Bernard Leca), Centre de Sociologie des Organisations, Sciences Po (Christine Musselin) and HEC Paris (Rodolphe Durand).

Jun 17
By SnO - Post on 2010 June 17 - No Comments - conference

Coming to HEC

Two buses will leave at 7:40 from the following metro stations in the South of Paris (see maps of the area and the Paris metro):

  • Metro station “Porte de Versailles” (metro line 12): the bus will be waiting in front of Gate L of the exhibition center,
  • Metro station “Place Balard” (metro line 8 )

The buses belong to “SAVAC” company and will have a “SNO-HEC” sign on the front.

If you intend to take one of the buses, please email Veronique (hoffsteter@hec.fr) as soon as possible to let her know whether you will be leaving from “Balard” or “Porte de Versailles”.

Conference

Coffee and pastries will be served before the sessions start (program).

The conference will take place in Amphi TEZENAS (maps of the campus and the main building).

If weather permits, lunch will be served outside to facilitate exchanges among participants.

Going back to Paris

The buses will leave the campus at 6.45 pm. One bus will go directly to our Social Event, “le Musée du Vin“, where we will have a great dinner and nice wine tasting (see access map).

The other bus will leave you at Metro stations “Balard” and “Porte de Versailles”.

Jun 17
By SnO - Post on 2010 June 17 - No Comments - conference, summer School

Overview: Managing Rare Events and Learning from the Unexpected

The 2010 Medici Summer School was held in La Pietra International Conference and Events Center, Florence, Italy, between June 7th and 11th. It was co-sponsored by Alma Graduate School of Management (University of Bologna), HEC Paris School of Management and Stern School of Business (New York University) and is the second edition of the Medici Summer School in Management Studies for doctoral students and young researchers. The Summer School is designed to promote doctoral education and research in management studies and contribute to the development of enlightened practice in the management of business organizations.

The one-week program allows for ample interaction between students and faculty as it combines lectures, research seminars and student presentations, as well as social events.

25 PhD students from various universities including Oxford, Cambridge, NYU, McGill, LBS, Bologna, and HEC, among others, attended the school. This year’s focus was on the role that “unexpected events” play in organizational functioning. The discussions revolved around two key questions:  How do unexpected events affect, and get shaped by, organizations? How can managers learn from and manage unexpected events?

Starting with a discussion on the notion of rare events and their meaning for research on strategy and organizations, the summer school continued with the application of econometric models to rare events and examined how these models fare in the presence of rare events.  The focus then shifted to the cognitive aspects of rare events, and how managerial interpretation mattered. Finally, the current state of research on rare events and possible avenues for future research on the subject was explored.

1st day

On the first day, Joe Lampel (City University) explored how rare events can be an impetus to pursue fundamental change for organizations. He argued that the issue is not so much what organizations learn “from” rare events but what they learn “through” rare events. Starting from two definitions of unusual events (either as low-probability estimates or as enacted salience), he investigated three potential consequences of unexpected events for organizations: auditing existent response repertories, strengthening organizing routines, and transforming organizational identity. As an example of learning processes triggered by rare events, he presented his empirical study about the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Museum’s roof collapse, which offered an opportunity for learning and transforming the organization’s identity.

2nd day

On the second day, William Greene (NYU) gave his first lecture, in which he talked about the distinction between rare and unusual events, modeling, probabilities, correlation and regression. He emphasized that assigning probabilities to events requires a construct of a meaningful framework within which the experiment can be repeated, and that assigning infinitesimal probabilities to events in retrospect is not a productive exercise. A rare event, as a black swan, is a highly improbable event with three principal characteristics: it is unpredictable, carries a massive impact; and after the fact, we concoct an explanation that makes it appear less random, and more predictable, than it was.

He continued his lecture with econometric modeling when there are unusual events -rather than rare events- and how to use outside information in a Bayesian update. Invalid model assumptions such as Gaussian Copula function of David Li, which was used to price hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of CDOs filled with mortgages, is also discussed.

3rd day

William Greene held the morning session and gave his second lecture. The topics covered included linear and robust quantile regression, robust quantile models for counts and binary choice when the event is unusual. Greene concluded by emphasizing that rare events are outside the realm of modeling paradigm and hence econometric models can only accommodate unusual events. Still, models may be merely inadequate, as outliers are “unusual” in the context of the model and may be a consequence of the specification.

Raghu Garud (Penn State University) held the afternoon session of the third day. He discussed the prevailing view of rare events as very low-probability estimates. Preferring the “unusual event” expression to that of “rare event”, he shed light on narrative development processes that help organizations learn from unusual experiences. Through narratives, actors within organizations create situated understandings and negotiate consensual meanings of these unusual events. Meanings are more constructed upon experiences and memories of actors than given by events. That helps explain differentiated responses amongst organizations to unexpected events.

4th day

On the fourth day, Zur Shapira (NYU) discussed whether it is possible to learn under extreme and recurring conditions. He presented his paper “Organizational Learning under Extreme Turbulent & Recurring Conditions: Effect of costs of anticipated consequences on hurricane evacuation decisions”, which focuses on the behavior of local officials in making evacuation decision. He discussed how judgmental issues involved in decision making increased the number of evacuation “errors” and he pointed to the gap between the intentions to learn and the harsh reality that makes such learning a very difficult task.

5th day

On the last day, Jerker Denrell (Oxford University) raised a surprising question: Are the best performers the most impressive? He suggested that when trying to explain extreme performances of firms, people give more credit to luck than to skills. A fat-tailed error term generates non-monotonic association between outcomes and expectations. He also discussed the implications of under-sampling of failure, which makes it very hard to identify factors that lead firms from “incompetent” to “fine”.

Throughout the week, students were able to present their papers and get feedback from both faculty and peers. Students also had the opportunity to carry informal discussions with faculty during lunch breaks and during a pizza party at a very nice restaurant overlooking Florence from the famous Fiesole heights.