Walking the tightrope: the balancing work of agency in organizational routines

DSpace/Manakin Repository

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Zirpoli, Francesco it_IT
dc.contributor.author Balzarin, Lisa <1989> it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2019-12-09 it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2020-10-14T07:10:39Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-01T13:34:56Z
dc.date.issued 2020-02-04 it_IT
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10579/17799
dc.description.abstract The thesis explores how the relationship between agency and structure works in organizational routines. The first paper conceptually analyses agency as decision making. In organizational routines, agents have the freedom to choose which action to perform despite the boundaries of action that the routine imposes. Deciding how to enact the routine alters its unfolding in the short and long term. However, how decision making occurs within organizational routines is still blurry. The paper fills this gap through a model that shows that the internal environment of the organizational routine is characterized by a certain level of uncertainty, information asymmetry, and information overload. As a result, the agent processes a heuristic logic of decision making. The second and the third papers are based on ethnographic research conducted in a museum characterized by a monthly turnover of employees. Data collection and analysis are guided by abductive logic. The second paper explores the input and the output of organizational routines: experience. Experience is the constant interaction of experience-as-stock -the familiarity that agents gain performing the routine- and experience-as-flow -the ongoing transaction between the individual and the environment. Despite the relevance of experience-as-stock for organizational routines and the dependence of it from experience-as-flow, little is known about how the one interacts with the other and vice versa. The paper questions how experience as duality works in organizational routines. The findings suggest that the interaction of experience-as-stock and experience-as-flow provokes the development of the tolerance interval, which is the range of how much the routine can be stretched without collapsing. The tolerance interval is supported by emerging mechanisms of control. These findings are the starting point of the third paper. Given the recurrence of routines and the fact that they are ubiquitous in the organization, not all of them are monitored by top-down mechanisms of control. Control can be emergent and among peers too. The paper investigates how control emerges in organizational routines. Data shows that agents in charge of performing the routine are triggered to shape their role, that overcomes that one assigned by the routine. During the routine performance, agents do not act only as performers, but also as controllers, activating peer monitoring. The seed of peer monitoring comes from the embeddedness of organizational routines in other organizational activities. it_IT
dc.language.iso en it_IT
dc.publisher Università Ca' Foscari Venezia it_IT
dc.rights © Lisa Balzarin, 2020 it_IT
dc.title Walking the tightrope: the balancing work of agency in organizational routines it_IT
dc.title.alternative it_IT
dc.type Doctoral Thesis it_IT
dc.degree.name Economia aziendale - management it_IT
dc.degree.level Dottorato di ricerca it_IT
dc.degree.grantor Dipartimento di Management it_IT
dc.description.academicyear Dottorato - Ciclo32° - Appello 17-01-20 it_IT
dc.description.cycle 32
dc.degree.coordinator Zirpoli, Francesco it_IT
dc.location.shelfmark D001998
dc.location Venezia, Archivio Università Ca' Foscari, Tesi Dottorato it_IT
dc.rights.accessrights embargoedAccess
dc.thesis.matricno 822614 it_IT
dc.format.pagenumber 166 p.
dc.subject.miur SECS-P/08 ECONOMIA E GESTIONE DELLE IMPRESE it_IT
dc.subject.miur SECS-P/10 ORGANIZZAZIONE AZIENDALE it_IT
dc.description.note it_IT
dc.degree.discipline it_IT
dc.contributor.co-advisor it_IT
dc.provenance.upload Lisa Balzarin (822614@stud.unive.it), 2019-12-09 it_IT
dc.provenance.plagiarycheck Francesco Zirpoli (fzirpoli@unive.it), 2020-01-17 it_IT


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record