Impossible Organizations: Self-Management and Organizational Reproduction
By (Author) Yohanan Stryjan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
6th October 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
658.3152
Hardback
209
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
Stryfan's study outlines a new theoretical perspective on self-managed organizations, which is also of interest to students of conventional organizations. The work describes the functioning of, and the preconditions for, successful self-management and its reproduction. Examples deal primarily with worker co-operatives and, to a lesser extent, with worker-owned enterprises and Israeli kibbutzism. All three organizational types have clear, formally defined bodies of members who take part, actually or potentially, in making and implementing their organizations' decisions. Stryjan's perception is that, in this instance, theory-making should best proceed from organizational practices as they are applied in such organizations. The theoretical perspective he outlines is derived from a literal interpretation of the democratic model and assumes that "superiors" in self-managed organizations reside at the "bottom", and have a permanent, hands-on commitment to shaping their organization. This is the starting point for a theoretical synthesis of elements taken from a variety of research traditions. The introductory chapter provides a basis for the study, and the theoretical groundwork is laid for outlining a model organization capable of accommodating and being directed by what its members do. Chapter two surveys the limitations of the concept of worker ownership, and suggests a concept of membership as a more suitable core concept for a theory of self-management. Subsequent chapters review available theoretical tools within organizational research that can be of use in dealing with links between individuals and organizations, and between organizations and their environment. A simple static model of organizational reproduction in a formally democratic organization with stable membership is presented first. Stryjan gradually expands this model to accommodate implementation failures, dissent and conflict, demographic deterioration and regeneration. The task of refining the theoretical model to approximate reality-based scenarios is completed in a discussion of the self-managed organization's interaction with its environment.
YOHANAN STRYJAN is a research fellow at Uppsala University in Sweden. An Israeli citizen, he has degrees from Ben Gurion University and Uppsala University, and is currently dividing his time between the department of Sociology at Uppsala University, the department of Business at Stockholm University, and is managing two research projects.