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Hannan M., Lazlo P., Carroll G. Logics of Organization Theory: Audiences, Codes, and Ecologies. Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2007.
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Building theories of organizations is challenging: theories are
partial and "folk" categories are fuzzy. The commonly used tools--first-order logic
and its foundational set theory--are ill-suited for handling these complications.
Here, three leading authorities rethink organization theory. Logics of Organization
Theory sets forth and applies a new language for theory building based on a nonmonotonic
logic and fuzzy set theory. In doing so, not only does it mark a major advance in
organizational theory, but it also draws lessons for theory building elsewhere in
the social sciences.
Organizational research typically analyzes organizations in categories such as "bank,"
"hospital," or "university." These categories have been treated as crisp analytical
constructs designed by researchers. But sociologists increasingly view categories
as constructed by audiences. This book builds on cognitive psychology and anthropology
to develop an audience-based theory of organizational categories. It applies this
framework and the new language of theory building to organizational ecology. It reconstructs
and integrates four central theory fragments, and in so doing reveals unexpected
connections and new insights.