Sub-theme 21: Complexity, Organizations, and Grand Challenges
Call for Papers
Managers and organizational scholars are increasingly being called on to deal with “grand challenges” and “wicked problems,”
including issues such as poverty, public health, and climate change, to name but a few. One of the hallmarks of such grand
challenges is their complexity, for as the EGOS Colloquium 2020 theme notes, they involve “an array of potential dilemmas,
paradoxes, complexities, contradictions, and conflicts”. Such complexity is challenging and often surprising in both its nature
and its consequences. Their interdependencies mean that the outcomes of attempts to solve such challenges are often unexpected
and difficult to predict and may give rise to new issues elsewhere.
Likewise, managers who care about impactful
results have realized that the path forward remains unclear. Existing data frequently offers a dizzying array of suggestions.
Each suggestion may have merit and some may be more valuable than others. Yet, many suggestions may only work in combination
or “conjunction” with others. A combination of a few tactics may be more effective than either a piecemeal approach that prioritizes
only one strategy or a shotgun approach that tries everything.
Clearly, the complex challenges that societies
and organizations currently face require nuanced and powerful theorizing. Yet, many of our current approaches – both theoretically
and empirically – are not able to account for this kind of complexity. Thus, organizational scholars need to develop novel
avenues of critical thinking, innovative and creative theories, and methodologies capable of translating creative theories
into corresponding empirical models. In recent years, researchers have aimed to account for such complexity with a theoretical
shift toward understanding phenomena in a configurational manner (Fiss et al., 2013; Misangyi et al., 2016). At the same time,
corresponding methodological developments have aimed at tackling causal complexity, most prominently the emergence of a set-analytic
perspective (Ragin, 1987, 2000, 2008; Fiss, 2007, 2011). These developments present more than a resurgence of configurational
thinking or a new methodological approach – they suggest the emergence of a neo-configurational perspective, a perspective
that aims to understand social and organizational phenomena in set-theoretic terms, allowing for an analysis of specific causal
complexities.
In the current sub-theme, we aim to start a conversation about how this neo-configurational
perspective offers opportunities to disentangle complex social and organizational challenges. Specifically, we would like
to open up a dialogue about how a deeper engagement with complexity and the use of a neo-configurational perspective may reshape
ways of theorizing organization; how we empirically engage with our data to understand the rich and complicated relationships
that characterize organizational life; and how scholars may leverage causal complexity to advance research on grand challenges,
wicked problems, and beyond.
We invite papers that contribute to a configurational understanding and welcome
contributions from multiple theoretical fields of organizational studies. We encourage theoretical, empirical, and methodological
contributions that strive to enhance our ability to capture causal complexity and the dynamic nature of configurations. We
especially welcome papers deploying set-theoretic methods such as crisp and fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA)
and related set-analytic and configurational approaches, but also work using case studies, process tracing, and other empirical
approaches for advancing our scholarly understanding of causal complexity.
Our sub-theme particularly invites
contributions that focus on one or more of the following questions:
Theoretical Connections: How does a neo-configurational perspective challenge existing theories on grand challenges? How can set-theoretic methods deepen existing theories or integrate different aspects of existing theories such as institutional theories, resource dependency theories, and others?
Methodological Innovation: What new methodological tools do we need to disentangle causal complexity? How can we make the methodological toolkit more robust and complementary? On what assumptions are set-theoretic methods and QCA based and how can we assess/test these assumptions? What are the limits of set-theoretic methods?
Empirical Findings: We welcome original empirical applications of QCA in different fields of organizational studies (CSR, corporate governance and sustainability, strategy, sustainable entrepreneurship, human resources, etc.).
The Role of Organizations: What role, specifically, do organizations play in dealing with the challenges of today, both grand and small? How can organizations help us overcome complexity? Conversely, what is the role of complexity in (and of) organizations?
Uncovering (Category) Intersectionality: One central feature of grand challenges is the interconnected nature of social categorizations (e.g., the trade-offs among social, environmental and economic categories in the triple bottom line.) How can a neo-configurational perspective help us understand systems of reinforcing advantages and disadvantages?
Institutional Complexity: How might a neo-configurational perspective help us understand incompatible prescriptions from multiple institutional logics? What can it contribute to studying constellations of institutional logics?
Complex Organizational Forms: After a century of classic organizational forms and structures, new ways of organizing emerge, such as organizational networks, virtual and hybrid organizations. How can a neo-configurational perspective clarify the processes and the complex conditions that make these forms (in-)effective?
Theorizing Hybridity: Complexity can weaken difference in type, suggesting the existence of hybrid solutions or recombination instead of discrete categories and positions. How do we theorize such organizational hybridity and fuzzy organizational boundaries?
References
- Fiss, P.C. (2007): “A set-theoretic approach to organizational configurations.” Academy of Management Review, 32 (4), 1180–1198.
- Fiss, P.C. (2011): “Building better causal theories: A fuzzy set approach to typologies in organizational research.” Academy of Management Journal, 54 (2), 393–420.
- Fiss, P.C., Cambré, B., & Marx, A. (eds.) (2013): Configurational Theory and Methods in Organizational Research. Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 38. Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.
- Misangyi, V.F. (2016): “Institutional complexity and the meaning of loose coupling: Connecting institutional sayings and (not) doings.” Strategic Organization, 14 (4), 1–34.
- Ragin, C.C. (1987): The Comparative Method: Moving Beyond Qualitative and Quantitative Strategies. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Ragin, C.C. (2000): Fuzzy-Set Social Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Ragin, C.C. (2008): Redesigning Social Inquiry: Fuzzy Sets and Beyond. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.