Exploring the Concept of "Profession" for Organizational Communcation Research: Institutional Influences in a Veterinary Organization
Recent scholarship has argued that the concept of profession is undertheorized and accepted uncritically. The authors address this issue by summarizing the characteristics of professions and articulating professions as institutionalized occupations. Their study of a veterinary call center suggests t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Management communication quarterly 2009-02, Vol.22 (3), p.357 |
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description | Recent scholarship has argued that the concept of profession is undertheorized and accepted uncritically. The authors address this issue by summarizing the characteristics of professions and articulating professions as institutionalized occupations. Their study of a veterinary call center suggests that profession influences the workplace through (a) knowledge providing, seeking, and sharing; (b) self-management of behavior, emotions, and productivity; (c) internal sources of motivation; (d) a service orientation; (e) the invocation of field standards; and (f) participation in a knowledge community beyond the workplace. Although these features may be distinguishable analytically, they are unified in the experience of work. Moreover, the close match in this case between the service orientations of the profession and of the organization strengthened the workers' commitment and thus the legitimacy of the organization. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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subjects | Commitments Organization theory Organizational behavior Professions Studies |
title | Exploring the Concept of "Profession" for Organizational Communcation Research: Institutional Influences in a Veterinary Organization |
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