Making Sense of the Organization elaborates on the influential idea that organizations are interpretation systems that scan, interpret, and learn.  These selected essays represent a new approach to the way managers learn and act in response to their environment and the way organizational change evolves.  Readers of this volume will find a wealth of examples and insights which go well beyond thinking and cognition to explain action.  The author's ideas are at the forefront of our thinking on leadership, teams, and the management of change. “This book engages the puzzle of impermanence in organizing. Through rich examples, evocative language, artful literature citing, and imaginative connecting, Weick re-introduces core ideas and themes around attending, interpreting, acting and learning to unlock new insights about impermanent organizing.  The wisdom in this book is timeless and timely. It prods scholars and managers of organizations to complicate their views of organizing in ways that enrich thought and action.” - Jane E. Dutton, Robert L. Kahn Distinguished University Professor, University of Michigan
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Making Sense of the Organization elaborates on the influential idea that organizations are interpretation systems that scan, interpret, and learn. These selected essays represent a new approach to the way managers learn and act in response to their environment and the way organizational change evolves.
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Preface vii Acknowledgments ix Part I Introduction 1 1. Organized Impermanence: An Overview 3 2. Mundane Poetics: Searching for Wisdom in Organizational Theory 9 3. Faith, Evidence, and Action: Better Guesses in an Unknowable World 27 Part II Attending 45 4. Managing the Unexpected: Complexity as Distributed Sensemaking 47 5. Information Overload Revisited 65 Kathleen M. Sutcliffe and Karl. E Weick 6. Organizing for Mindfulness: Eastern Wisdom and Western Knowledge 85 Karl E. Weick and Ted Putnam Part III Interpretation 107 7. Making Sense of Blurred Images: Mindful Organizing in Mission STS-107 109 8. Organizing and the Process of Sensemaking 129 Karl E. Weick, Kathleen M. Sutcliffe, and David Obstfeld 9. Impermanent Systems and Medical Errors: Variety Mitigates Adversity 153 Part IV Action 173 10. Hospitals as Cultures of Entrapment: A Re-analysis of the Bristol Royal Infirmary 175 Karl E. Weick and Kathleen M. Sutcliffe 11. Enacting an Environment: The Infrastructure of Organizing 189 12. Positive Organizing and Organizational Tragedy 207 Part V Learning and Change 223 13. Emergent Change as a Universal in Organizations 225 14. Drop Your Tools: An Allegory for Organizational Studies 243 15. Leadership as the Legitimation of Doubt 261 Epilogue 273 References 275 Index 281
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The seeming permanence of organizations conceals an endless cycle of interruptions, recoveries, and re-organizing. This fundamental cycle is explored in a series of essays that focus on ways in which people organize their attention, interpretations, actions, and learning in order to cope with impermanence. Coping is explored in settings such as the spread of a puzzling virus, a foam strike on the space shuttle, excess deaths following pediatric surgery, wildland fires that suddenly explode, and the misidentification of fingerprints in a crime lab. Recovery from events such as these tends to be rough. The fixes made in the name of recovery tend to be transient and eventually give way to new interruptions, new challenges for sensemaking, and renewed efforts to reorganize. The purpose of these essays is to render the challenges less mysterious. 
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780470742204
Publisert
2009-07-24
Utgiver
Vendor
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Vekt
522 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
320

Forfatter

Biographical note

Karl Weick is the Rensis Likert College Professor of Organizational Behavior and Psychology, and Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan.

He is one of the leading figures in the American Academy of Management and he is seen by many as one of the most influential thinkers and writers in the field.