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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The role of roles in risk management change: the case of an Italian bank

Angelo RiccaboniS QuarchioniElena Giovannoni

subject

Economics and EconometricsKnowledge managementProcess (engineering)Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Control (management)AccountingPower (social and political)Organizational changePolitical scienceAccounting0502 economics and businessBusiness and International ManagementRisk managementRisk Managementbusiness.industry05 social sciencesNew institutionalism050201 accountingProcesses of changeManagementRisk Management Old & New Institutional Studies Radical Organizational Change Longitudinal Case Study.Business Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Radical Organizational Change Longitudinal Case StudybusinessRelevant informationOld & New Institutional Studies050203 business & managementFinance

description

This paper explores the role of roles (i.e. groups of actors characterised by the same functional tasks within an organisation), and of their interactions, within processes of change in risk management (RM). By combining insights from the literature on RM and from institutional studies, this paper suggests that change in RM can be interpreted as a process that involves both enabling and precipitating dynamics [Greenwood, R., & Hinings, C. R. (1996). Understanding radical organizational change: Bringing together the old and the new institutionalism. The Academy of Management Review, 21, 1022–1054. doi:10.5465/AMR.1996.9704071862] between different roles. Aiming to address these dynamics empirically, we rely on a longitudinal case study of an Italian bank. The study shows that the interactions between roles were dependent on their respective specific interests, the different institutional templates they supported, and the shifts in power for control over relevant information. These dynamics both affected and were affected by the change in the template-in-use within the bank and allowed a sort of RM ideal (i.e. the search for more RM) to persist over evolving templates.

10.1080/09638180.2014.990475http://hdl.handle.net/11365/49992