Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 91971
The power of networks: organising vs. organisation
The power of networks: organising vs. organisation // Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility / Crowther, David, Rayman Bacchus L. (ur.).
Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2003.
CROSBI ID: 91971 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
The power of networks: organising vs. organisation
Autori
Mraović, Branka
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility
Urednik/ci
Crowther, David, Rayman Bacchus L.
Izdavač
Ashgate Publishing
Grad
Aldershot
Godina
2003
Raspon stranica
ISBN
U tisku
Ključne riječi
Networks, organisation, organising, Internet technologies, power
Sažetak
Owing to a rocketing development of the Internet technologies, a new, global space for the expansion of dynamic networks has opened up. The networks enable companies to transform themselves and to become a part of a greater network, so that the 'organisation' ceases to be a dominant organisational entity. The rational principles lying in the background of the modern, Weberian organisation, which aimed at a single organisational form to dominate worldwide, have lost their raison d'etre. In the age of globality, the principles are moved out of the organisations into the direction of social movements. Hence they belong to the sphere of the value choices, and to commitments to collective goals outside the field of employment. In the reality of multiple and interconnected networks, the modern organisation has given way to organising; the author holds that the change in the paradigm of power, as a major milestone,has enabled the transfer. The concept of hierarchised power is opposed by analyses of power in organisations, which is now transferred onto the discoursive level. Relying on the poststructuralist understanding that structure cannot be seen as determining agency because it is not real and transcendent, but a product of human mind, the underlying message of this chapter is that no form of organisation or order seems to be inevitable. This position opens up a space for the kind of organising reaching towards the constitution of social order with a more 'human touch'. Diversity of organisational structures comes as an immediate result of the processes, which means that globalisation can hardly be taken as a uniform process.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Sociologija
POVEZANOST RADA