6533b82cfe1ef96bd12900f2

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Structural Correspondence Between Organizational Theories

Svitlana FirsovaHerman Aksom

subject

organisaatioteoriatOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSociology of scientific knowledgeStrategy and Managementrealismi (filosofia)organisaatiotutkimus0603 philosophy ethics and religionstructural realismcorrespondence principleHistory and Philosophy of ScienceOrder (exchange)Management of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessNatural sciencetieteenteoriaSociologyOrganizational theoryBusiness and International Managementinstitutional theorystrukturalismiField (Bourdieu)05 social sciencesNew institutionalism06 humanities and the artsinstitutionalismiEpistemologyContingency theory060302 philosophyInternational political economykontingenssiteoria050203 business & management

description

AbstractOrganizational research constitutes a differentiated, complex and fragmented field with multiple contradicting and incommensurable theories that make fundamentally different claims about the social and organizational reality. In contrast to natural sciences, the progress in this field can’t be attributed to the principle of truthlikeness where theories compete against each other and only best theories survive and prove they are closer to the truth and thus demonstrate scientific knowledge accumulation. We defend the structural realist view on the nature of organizational theories in order to demonstrate that despite the multiplicity of isolated and competing explanations of organization-environment relations these theories are still logically compatible and mutually consistent which, in turn, assures theoretical progress in the field. Although postulating different and incompatible ontologies, three most successful organization-environments theories, namely, contingency theory, new institutionalism and population ecology share the same explanations of the relations between organizations and environments at the structural level. Without this principle one would say that what occurs in the field of organization theory is a change rather than a progress.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s40926-021-00163-3