Organizational Legitimacy as Deliberation: Towards a New Political Role of the Business Firm
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_6FAA67415EB5
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Organizational Legitimacy as Deliberation: Towards a New Political Role of the Business Firm
Title of the book
Individuum und Organisation: Neue Trends eines organisationswissenschaftlichen Forschungsfeldes
Publisher
Deutscher Universitätsverlag
Address of publication
Wiesbaden, Germany
ISBN
978-3-8350-0553-2
978-3-8350-9386-7
978-3-8350-9386-7
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2007
Editor
Lang R., Schmidt A.
Pages
17-42
Language
english
Abstract
Legitimacy can be understood as the conformation with social norms, values, and expectations (Oliver 1996). It is subjectively perceived and ascribed to actions or institutions by social construction (Berger/Luckman 1966). Legitimacy is vital for organizational survival as it is a precondition for the continuous flow of resources and the sustained support by the organization’s constituents (Parsons 1960; Pfeffer/Salancik 1978; Weber 1978). Persons or institutions who lose legitimacy find it difficult to enter into processes of social exchange as their partners do not rely on their compliance with social rules.
Create date
14/05/2008 11:53
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:28