6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125a3a3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Structural Dynamics and Intentional Governance in Strategic Interorganizational Network Evolution: A Multilevel Approach
Gabriella LevantiGiovanni Battista DagninoArabella Mocciaro Li Destrisubject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management050402 sociologyKnowledge managementScope (project management)Computer sciencebusiness.industryStrategy and ManagementCorporate governance05 social sciencesPublic relationsNetwork dynamicsmultilevel approach network structural dynamics strategic interorganizational networks whole network governanceEmpirical research0504 sociologyLeverage (negotiation)Order (exchange)Dynamics (music)Management of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessAgency (sociology)businessSettore SECS-P/08 - Economia E Gestione Delle Imprese050203 business & managementdescription
This article aims to shed light on the drivers underlying the role and scope of intentional governance of the structural dynamics of whole interorganizational networks. Prior research has distinguished networks that are emergent from networks that are orchestrated. While empirical studies have shown situations in which the role and scope of intentional governance of whole interorganizational networks has changed in time, and there is a growing interest regarding the endogenous drivers of network dynamics, the dimensions that influence intentional governance of network structure dynamics and the way this is carried out remain still to be elucidated. In order to pinpoint these drivers, we leverage the models of network structure dynamics elaborated within studies conducted at the intersection between network research and complexity science to propose a multilevel interpretive framework that clarifies the role and scope of intentional agency at different structural levels of interorganizational networks. Our framework advances a twofold conceptual contribution: on one hand, we tackle the change in the role and scope of intentional governance of network structures in both the early stages and the later stages of network evolution. On the other, we interpret the network of formal ties as resembling the accelerating network model, with the network of informal ties being akin to the scale-free (or truncated scale-free) network model of complex networks theory.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-01-10 |