Sub-theme 31: Network Agency and Creativity: The Mutual Interdependence between Network Actors and Social Structures

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Convenors:
Stefan Breet
Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Francesca Pallotti
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
Stefano Tasselli
University of Exeter, United Kingdom, & Erasmus University, The Netherlands

Call for Papers


Organizational research is pervaded by tension on network agency. Networks and agency are the apparent poles of an oxymoron, in which the network identifies the set of nodes and ties that form social structure, enabling and/or constraining network participants’ (individuals, teams, organizations) choices and actions, and agency represents the extent to which actors forge, reproduce and shape macro-level (inter)organizational and social structures (Tasselli & Kilduff, 2021).
 
Despite the burgeoning interest in this topic, which is signalled by the increasing number of empirical (e.g., Quintane & Carnabuci; Soda et al., 2018; Tasselli & Kilduff, 2018) and review papers (e.g., Burt et al., 2013; Chen et al., 2022; Halevy et al., 2019; Ahuja et al., 2011), symposia and special issues published by leading journals in the field, there is no doubt that the study of the nuanced still contradictory connections between network participants’ action and structure deserves deeper and richer attention. On the one hand, it is now universally accepted by organizational researchers that networks are social canvases that either favour or hamper network participants’ action, but it is at the level of network actors, with their idiosyncratic attributes and behaviours, that social action originates and then diffuses in and throughout the network (e.g., Kleinbaum et al., 2015; Pallotti et al., 2023; Tasselli & Sancino, 2023). This is particularly evident when creative individual action introduces an unexpected change in the structure of the social canvas sustained by organizational social networks (Perry-Smith & Mannucci, 2017).
 
However, although the tension concerning agency has been prescient in social network theory and research since its very beginnings (e.g., Moreno, 1941), it has gained popularity (only) recently. Therefore, several important questions remain unanswered. These questions are both theoretically and empirically relevant and represent illustrative (although non-exhaustive) examples of the core topics that we expect to present and discuss in the proposed sub-theme.

  • How does networking happen? (i.e., through which processes and behaviours do actors come to occupy those structural positions that explain personal advantage and organizational effectiveness?)

  • How do actors change their current structural network position through innovation and creative action, and how does individual creativity diffuse, persist, and becomes a team or (inter) organizational feature?

  • What are the coevolutionary patterns through which individual actors and social networks mutually define each other in a dynamic process of structuration and reciprocal influence?

  • How do social networks shape individual identities and personalities, in a structuration approach to agency that implicitly calls for a parallel, ideographic approach to networking?

 
The aim of this sub-theme is to attract and involve a diverse and rich group of young and experienced researchers in an interactive set of presentations and discussions of these and other relevant questions and debates concerning network agency. The current questions and debates involve issues associated with network actors’ characteristics, agency, cognition, behaviours, and with the dynamic interplay of individual choices and structural contingencies. These ideas make the study of organizational networks relevant at different levels of analysis and represent the basis from which the study of social interactions contributes to the articulation of new theory and to the identification of new organizationally relevant phenomena.
 
Given the broad spectrum of our research questions, we welcome submissions at both the micro-level (e.g., intra-organizational social networks) and at the macro-level of analysis (e.g., relationships between organizations or institutions). We are particularly interested in contributions that focus on how creativity originates from – and at the same time connects – multiple levels of organizational agency. We invite papers that follow a wide range of epistemological approaches and methodologies, ranging from quantitative submissions to qualitative and meta-analytical submissions. Review and theoretical papers are also welcomed. Overall, this sub-theme calls for the investigation of how organizational actors, through their agentic or structured approaches to network patterning, model social reality, and of how in turn these actor-based or structural models interact with individual action and organizational outcomes.

 


References


  • Ahuja, G., Soda, G., & Zaheer, A. (2012): “The genesis and dynamics of organizational networks.” Organization Science, 23 (2), 434–448.
  • Burt, R.S., Kilduff, M., & Tasselli, S. (2013): “Social network analysis: Foundations and frontiers on advantage.” Annual Review of Psychology, 64, 527–547.
  • Chen, H., Mehra, A., Tasselli, S., & Borgatti, S.P. (2022): “Network dynamics and organizations: A review and research agenda.” Journal of Management, 48 (6), 1602–1660.
  • Halevy, N., Halali, E., & Zlatev, J.J. (2019): “Brokerage and brokering: An integrative review and organizing framework for third party influence.” Academy of Management Annals, 13 (1), 215–239.
  • Kleinbaum, A.M., Jordan, A.H., & Audia, P.G. (2015): “An altercentric perspective on the origins of brokerage in social networks: How perceived empathy moderates the self-monitoring effect.” Organization Science, 26 (4), 1226–1242.
  • Moreno, J.L. (1941): “Foundations of sociometry: An introduction.” Sociometry, 4, 15–35.
  • Pallotti, F., Mascia, D., & Giorgio, L. (2023): “A multilevel study of social networks and collective reactions to organizational change.” Journal of Organizational Behavior, 44 (7), 1109–1128.
  • Perry-Smith, J.E., & Mannucci, P.V. (2017): “From creativity to innovation: The social network drivers of the four phases of the idea journey.” Academy of Management Review, 42 (1), 53–79.
  • Quintane, E., & Carnabuci, G. (2016): “How do brokers broker? Tertius gaudens, tertius iungens, and the temporality of structural holes.” Organization Science, 27 (6), 1343–1360.
  • Soda, G., Tortoriello, M., & Iorio, A. (2018): “Harvesting value from brokerage: Individual strategic orientation, structural holes, and performance.” Academy of Management Journal, 61 (3), 896–918.
  • Tasselli, S., & Kilduff, M. (2018): “When brokerage between friendship cliques endangers trust: A personality–network fit perspective.” Academy of Management Journal, 61(3), 802–825.
  • Tasselli, S., & Kilduff, M. (2021): “Network agency.” Academy of Management Annals, 15 (1), 68–110.
  • Tasselli, S., & Sancino, A. (2023): “Leaders’ Networking Behaviours in a Time of Crisis: A Qualitative Study on the Frontline against COVID‐19.” Journal of Management Studies, 60 (1), 120–173.
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Stefan Breet is an Assistant Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship at the Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands. His research examines how organizations can become more entrepreneurial and innovative. Stefan is particularly interested in the effect of workplace social networks on the generation and implementation of innovative ideas.
Francesca Pallotti is an Associate Professor at the School of Business, Operations and Strategy at the University of Exeter, United Kingdom. Her research investigates how social relations develop and affect individual and organizational behaviour and outcomes. Francesca’s current research focuses on social identity and organizational change, coordination within teams, and collaboration among organizations.
Stefano Tasselli is a Professor of Management at the University of Exeter Business School, United Kingdom, and a faculty member at the Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, The Netherlands. He is the Chair of the Social Networks Society. Stefano’s research and teaching focus is on the interplay between psychological and relational antecedents of organizational functioning, including the analysis of the micro-foundations of organizational social networks; social networks, leadership, and innovation; and organizational theory.
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