Murky Power: “Think Tanks” as Boundary Organizations
This chapter uses the case of American think tanks to develop the idea of a “boundary organization,” or a formal organization that acquires its distinctiveness and efficacy from its intermediate location in the social structure. Traversing, overlapping, and incorporating the logics of multiple insti...
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description | This chapter uses the case of American think tanks to develop the idea of a “boundary organization,” or a formal organization that acquires its distinctiveness and efficacy from its intermediate location in the social structure. Traversing, overlapping, and incorporating the logics of multiple institutional spheres – including those of academia, politics, business, and the market – think tanks at first seem to be organizations “divided against themselves.” However, by gathering complex mixtures of otherwise discordant resources, they create novel products, carry out novel practices, and claim for themselves a crucial mediating role in the social structure. This chapter's ultimate aim is to consider the implications of this idea for theories of organizational power. With respect to this aim, I argue that boundary organizations – and organizational boundary-making processes in general – underscore the need to think about power in relational and processional terms. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1108/S0733-558X(2012)0000034007 |
format | Book Chapter |
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source | Emerald Books Business Management And Economics; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts |
subjects | Boundaries Effectiveness Markets Organizational Power Organizational theory & behaviour Politics Power Respect Social Structure Sociology Think Tanks |
title | Murky Power: “Think Tanks” as Boundary Organizations |
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