Lazega's book is original and insightful through his rich field-specific knowledge, a theoretically refined and undogmatic approach, and through sophisiticated data collection and analysis. This book is clearly written.

European Sociological Review

The lessons Lazega draws are novel and important ... Identifying the myriad ways in which relations of production affect the output of the knowledge workers on whom our prosperity and progress depend in this post-industrial world is a vital task, to which Emmanuel Lazega has made valuable contributions.

Richard Abel, Journal of Law and Society

'It is a remarkable piece of scholarship, both in its theoretical development and in its execution'

Administrative Science Quarterly

Organizations performing non-routine, innovative, often knowledge- intensive tasks - for example professional partnerships - need a rather flat, collegial, and non - bureaucratic structure. This book examines cooperation among partners in a US corporate law firm and provides a grounded theory of collective action among rival peers, or collegiality. It is first network study of such a frim. Members (partners and associates) are portrayed as independent entrepreneurs who build social niches in their organization and cultivate status competition among themselves. This behaviour allows them to fulfil their commitment to an extremely constraining partnership agreement and generates informal social mechanisms (bounded solidarity, lateral control, oligarchic regualtion) that help a flat organization govern itself: maintain individual performance, even for tenured partners; capitalize knowledge and control quality; monitor and sanction opportunistic free-riding; solve the 'too many chefs' problem; balance the powers of rainmakers and schedulers; and integrate the firm in spite of many centrifugal forces. These mechanisms and the solutions they provide are examined using a broadly-conceived structural approach combining theory-driven network analysis, ethnography of task forces performing knowledge-intensive work, and analysis of management and internal politics in the firm. Emmanuel Lazega presents a theory of the collegial organization which generalizes its results to all kinds of partnerships, larger multinational professional services firms, and collegial pockets in flattening bureaucracies alike.
Les mer
This book examines cooperation among rival partners in a North-eastern US corporate law firm. Members are portrayed as interdependent entrepreneurs who build social niches in their firm, and cultivate and mitigate status competition among themselves.
Les mer
Introduction ; 1. A Structural Theory of Collective Action Among Peers ; 2. Spencer, Grace, & Robbins ; 3. Niches and Status in the Firm: A Specific Exchange System ; 4. Economic Performance and Quality Control ; 5. Too Many Chefs? ; 6. Balance of Power and Organizational Integration: A Montesquieu Structure ; 7. Pressuring Partners Back to Good Order: A Lateral Control Regime ; 8. Multi-Status Oligarchs and the Negotiation of Precarious Values ; Conclusion
Les mer
First network analysis of a corporate law partnership New theory of the collegial form of organizations Relevant to all knowledge-intensive, professional services firms
Emmanuel Lazega is Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Lille I, France. Previous positions have included Assistant Professor at the University of Versailles (1993-1999); Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale University (1988-1991); and Researcher at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Wolfson College, Oxford University (1986-1988)
Les mer
First network analysis of a corporate law partnership New theory of the collegial form of organizations Relevant to all knowledge-intensive, professional services firms

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199242726
Publisert
2001
Utgiver
Oxford University Press
Vekt
645 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
358

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Emmanuel Lazega is Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Lille I, France. Previous positions have included Assistant Professor at the University of Versailles (1993-1999); Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale University (1988-1991); and Researcher at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Wolfson College, Oxford University (1986-1988)