ToC: BH 58,5 Beer, Brewing and Business History

As a topic, this seems an area in which business historians are well equipped to do research 😉 Alas, finally, the long awaited special issue on… Beer is out, just in time for the weekend!

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 5, July 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

Special Issue: Beer, Brewing, and Business History

This new issue contains the following articles:

Original Articles
Beer, brewing, and business history
Ignazio Cabras & David M. Higgins
Pages: 609-624 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1122713
Articles
From reviving tradition to fostering innovation and changing marketing: the evolution of micro-brewing in the UK and US, 1980–2012
Ignazio Cabras & Charles Bamforth
Pages: 625-646 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1027692

 
Vertical and financial ownership: Competition policy and the evolution of the UK pub market
Julie Bower
Pages: 647-666 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1041380

 
Vertical monopoly power, profit and risk: The British beer industry, c.1970–c.2004
David Higgins, Steven Toms & Moshfique Uddin
Pages: 667-693 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1041381

 
How beer created Belgium (and the Netherlands): the contribution of beer taxes to war finance during the Dutch Revolt
Koen Deconinck, Eline Poelmans & Johan Swinnen
Pages: 694-724 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1024231

 
Happy hour followed by hangover: financing the UK brewery industry, 1880–1913
Graeme G. Acheson, Christopher Coyle & John D. Turner
Pages: 725-751 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1027693

 
A taste for temperance: how American beer got to be so bland
Ranjit S. Dighe
Pages: 752-784 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1027691

 
Death and re-birth of Alabama beer
Richard White
Pages: 785-795 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1024230
Original Articles
New identities from remnants of the past: an examination of the history of beer brewing in Ontario and the recent emergence of craft breweries
Kai Lamertz, William M. Foster, Diego M. Coraiola & Jochem Kroezen
Pages: 796-828 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1065819

Extended deadline for BH SI on History & Institutional Change

As we received several requests for extensions last week, the special issue editorial team decided to extend the submission deadline by three weeks to allow those authors who contacted us and any additional authors who may have missed the deadline because the of the Easter break to submit. Already submitted papers will be processed now, so you will hear from us shortly.

For the full call, see below:

!!! EXTENDED DEADLINE – NOW 25 APRIL 2016 !!!

 Business History Special Issue:

Historical Research on Institutional Change

Stephanie Decker, Aston University, UK, s.decker@aston.ac.uk
Lars Engwall, Uppsala University, Sweden, lars.engwall@fek.uu.se
Michael Rowlinson, Queen Mary University, London, m.rowlinson@qmul.ac.uk
Behlül Üsdiken, Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey, behlul@sabanciuniv.edu


The important role that institutions play for all forms of organizations has been recognized in a wide variety of disciplines. Douglass North’s (1990) book on the nature of institutional change in economic history was influential in both economics and history. Likewise has among others the article by DiMaggio and Powell’s (1983) been significant in sociology and organization studies. Nevertheless, the nature of institutional change has remained a heavily contested subject that has not seen the same degree of theoretical and empirical development.

Institutional change is by its very definition a process that unfolds over long time periods with fundamentally unpredictable outcomes that can only be properly evaluated with hindsight. Because institutional change is a fundamental feature in historical research, many historians do not necessarily define or reflect on this as a research phenomenon in its own right. On the other hand many research debates in organization studies have remained curiously a-historical when developing the antecedents, outcomes and mediating factors for processes of institutionalization, institutional maintenance, and deinstitutionalization (Dacin, Munir and Tracey, 2010).

Nevertheless, between these two extremes there are many processes of institutional change in organizations that develop over time periods that are too long to research with the standard methods of qualitative social science such as interviews or participant observations. Here some historical approaches based on archival research may create more interesting research designs (Wright and Zammuto, 2013). Historical theory also has different insights to offer organization studies (Rowlinson, Hassard et al. 2014). It is in these areas that management and organizational history could contribute by investigating phenomena from a more long-term perspective. Suddaby, Foster et al. (2014) have similarly argued for a more historical institutionalism to address unresolved issues in institutional theory, such as the paradox of embedded agency.

Within business and organizational history, there is an increasing interest in questions of theory and methodology. Alternative approaches, not just those drawn from the social sciences, but also from historiography, such as oral history or microhistory, offer new ways of approaching research. Historians interpret institutional theory in different ways from organization scholars (Rowlinson and Hassard 2013), which offers new avenues for interdisciplinary dialogue.

Submissions may address the following issues and questions, although this list is not exclusive:

  • The five C’s of historical thinking (change over time, context, contingency, causality and complexity) and the possibilities of institutional theory (Andrews and Burke, 2007)
  • New institutional theory in organizational sociology has lost the focus of old institutionalism on issues of politics and power. Would historical institutionalism offer a useful corrective?
  • Alternative methodologies for historical institutionalism: oral history, microhistory, ANTi-history
  • Institutional transplants beyond legal and economic history
  • Institutional entrepreneurs and institutional work – the return of historical actors and contingent decision-making
  • Institutional logics or politically-motivated ideologies: old wine in new bottles?
  • Routines, practices and process vs. the eventful temporality of history
  • Beyond path dependency in explaining long-term structural change in historical perspective

We hope to attract papers with a long-term perspective focusing on institutions, organizations as well as on organizational fields. We envisage that papers will be empirically rich but also they are linked to current institutional theories. In addition we shall also consider theoretically or methodologically oriented contributions provided they address both historical and institutional theory concerns.

Background of this proposal

This year the Standing Working Group 8 on Historical Perspectives in Organization Studies received over 50 submissions to its call on “History, Institutions and Institutional Change” for the European Group of Organizational Studies (EGOS) conference in Athens, Greece. Short paper submission from both historians and organization scholars were of very high quality and offered some exciting new approaches to both historical research and novel interpretations of institutional theory. As we are looking forward to the submission of long papers and the meeting in July 2015, we considered a special issue on this subject as timely and potentially significant for the further development of this interdisciplinary research. Considering the unusually large number of submissions, we feel confident that we will receive a significant number of high quality submissions for a special issue at Business History. We intend to have an open call for this special issue and use the EGOs track solely as a platform to advertise this call. The team of guest editors is international in composition, has different disciplinary backgrounds, and extensive editorial experience. Submission will be managed through Scholar One, and authors will be advised to submit their manuscripts directly to http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fbsh.

Timeline

Publish call for special issue: 1 July 2015 (to coincide with EGOS 2015)

Extended call for special issue: Monday 25 April 2016

Final decisions: 1 August 2017

Publication: Spring 2018

About the guest editors

Stephanie Decker is Professor of Organization Studies and History at Aston Business School, UK. As a historian working at a business school, most of her work is concerned with the relation between organization theory and history. She is co-editor of ‘Business History’ and is the recipient of the prestigious Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship 2014-15, as well as the principal organizer of a seminar series on organizational history funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (UK). She co-authored “Research Strategies for Organizational History” (Academy of Management Review, 2014) with Michael Rowlinson and John Hassard.

Lars Engwall is Professor of Business Administration at Uppsala University since 1981. His research has been directed towards the development of industries and organizations as well as the creation and diffusion of management knowledge. Among his publications related to the sub-theme can be mentioned Mercury Meets Minerva (2009/1992), Management Consulting (2002, ed. with Matthias Kipping), The Expansion of Management Knowledge (2002, ed. with Kerstin Sahlin-Andersson), and Reconfiguring Knowledge Production (2010 with Richard Whitley and Jochen Gläser).

Michael Rowlinson is Professor of Management and Organizational History in the School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London.  He has published widely on the relationship between history and organization theory in journals such as the Academy of Management Review, Business History, Human Relations, Organization, and Organization Studies. His research on corporate history concerns the representation of history by organizations, especially the dark side of their involvement in war, slavery, and racism. This has been published in journals such as Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Journal of Organizational Change Management, and Labour History Review. His current interests include the methodology of interpretive historical research in organization studies. He edited the journal Management & Organizational History from 2008 to 2013 and he is now a Senior Editor for Organization Studies and a co-editor for the Special Topic Forum of the Academy of Management Review on ‘History and Organization Studies: Toward a Creative Synthesis.’

Behlül Üsdiken is Professor of Management and Organization at Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey. Previously, he was a professor at Bogazici University. He has contributed to numerous journals as well as a variety of edited collections. He has served as a Co-editor of Organization Studies in 1996–2001 and a Section Editor of the Journal of Management Inquiry in 2007–2012. His current research focuses upon family business groups, management education and universities.

References

Dacin, MT., Munir K. and Tracey P. (2010) Formal Dining at Cambridge colleges: Linking ritual performance and institutional maintenance. Academy of Management Journal 53, 6: 1393-1418.

DiMaggio PJ. and Powell W. W. (1983) The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields. American Sociological Review 48,2: 147-160.

North DC. (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Rowlinson, M. and J. Hassard (2013). “Historical neo-institutionalism or neo-institutionalist history? Historical research in management and organization studies.” Management & Organizational History 8, 2: 111-126.

Rowlinson, M., J. Hassard and S. Decker (2014). “Research Strategies for Organizational History: A Dialogue between Historical Theory and Organization Theory.” Academy of Management Review 39,3: 205-274.

Suddaby, R., W. M. Foster and A. J. Mills (2014). Historical Institutionalism. Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. M. Bucheli and R. D. Wadhwani. Oxford, Oxford University Press: 100-123.

Wright, A. L. and Zammuto, R. F. (2013). Wielding the willow: Processes of institutional change in Englısh county cricket. Academy of Management Journal, 56(1), 308–330

Job advert: Research Fellow in Business History (15 April)

Cross-posted from the ABH mailing list. Please contact Anna Greenwood for questions.

Research Fellow for the Dept of History

History

Location:  University Park
Salary:  £28,982 to £37,768 per annum, depending on skills and experience. Salary progression beyond this scale is subject to performance.
Closing Date:  Friday 15 April 2016
Reference:  ARTS031316

Applications are invited for the above Research Assistant post based at University of Nottingham working with Dr Anna Greenwood on her project ‘Boots and the Colonial World: Imperial Networks and the Business of Empire: 1919-1960’. Focusing on a range of colonial and commonwealth regions (India, Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Fiji), the project will analyse Boots’ negotiation of the colonial market between 1919 and the end of Empire in 1960.

The successful candidate will be responsible for undertaking the first mapping of the international history of Boots, working closely with the archivist team at the Walgreens Boots Alliance archive in Nottingham. Duties will include:  archival research, secondary reading, the development of a larger funding bid and the organization of a workshop.

A limited amount of travel and irregular hours are expected as defined by the needs of the role.

Candidates must have a completed doctorate in medical history, colonial history, international history or business history. Some experience of academic event organisation and grant construction would also be desirable.

This full-time post will be offered on a fixed-term contract from 1stSeptember 2016 to 31st August 2017.

Informal enquiries may be addressed to Anna Greenwood on email; anna.greenwood@nottingham.ac.uk . Please note that applications sent directly to this email address will not be accepted.

The University of Nottingham is an equal opportunities employer and welcomes applications from all sections of the community.

Full job advert: https://jobs.nottingham.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?id=6883&forced=1

 

ToC: Business History 58, 4

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 4, June 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

This new issue contains the following articles:

Articles
‘To invite disappointment or worse’: governance, audit and due diligence in the Ferranti–ISC merger
Mark Billings, Anna Tilba & John Wilson
Pages: 453-478 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1085973

International shipping traffic as a determinant of the growing use of advertisements by local shopkeepers: a case study of eighteenth century Ghent
Stijn Ronsse & Glenn Rayp
Pages: 479-500 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1085974

The Oaks Colliery disaster of 1866: a case study in responsibility
Ben Harvey
Pages: 501-531 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1086342

Standing in the shadow of the corporation: women’s contribution to Swedish family business in the early twentieth century
Therese Nordlund Edvinsson
Pages: 532-546 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1105219

The British Airways Heritage Collection: an ethnographic ‘history’
Kristene E. Coller, Jean Helms Mills & Albert J. Mills
Pages: 547-570 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1105218

Complexity, anachronism and time-parochialism: historicising strategy while strategising history
Luca Zan
Pages: 571-596 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2014.956730

Book Reviews

Nickel. La naissance de l’industrie calédonienne
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 597-599 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1068518

Libr. XV: Cotrugli and de Raphaeli on Business and Bookkeeping in the Renaissance
Francesco Guidi-Bruscoli
Pages: 599-600 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1068520

Il farsi di una grande impresa. La Montecatini fra le due guerre mondiali
Vera Zamagni
Pages: 600-601 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1116785

The international distribution of news: the Associated Press, Press Association, and Reuters, 1848–1947
Howard Cox
Pages: 601-603 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1123802

Sanders Bros: the rise and fall of a British grocery giant
Phil Lyon
Pages: 603-604 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1123803

The entrepreneur in history: from medieval merchant to modern business leader
Matthew McCaffrey
Pages: 604-606 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1123804

The lion wakes: a modern history of HSBC
Geoffrey Wood
Pages: 606-608 | DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1123807

New article: Reassembling the Economic

A new article discussing new avenues in business and economic history has been published in the influential American Historical Review. The abstract follows below.

Reassembling the Economic: New Departures in Historical Materialism

by Kenneth Lipartito

Abstract

Recent writing in economic and business history is reexamining major transformations in world history—industrialization, capitalism, the global economy. This new literature avoids the structural determinism of old with much greater sensitivity to politics, culture, and social institutions. To a lesser degree it bridges the gap between social science–type history, often written by those trained in economics departments, and the more narrative styles of those trained in history departments. Taken as a whole, the recent scholarship offers a substantial rethinking of how we should engage material life, including the natural world, and a challenge to cultural historians who focus exclusively on language and representation. Woven through the various works is a possible new ontology that grants agency to things as well as people without the traditional tension between the power of external structures and the autonomy of human consciousness. This new materialism offers a way for historians to bring markets, finance, capital, technology, corporations, and other economic features of the past back into the historical narrative.

The American Historical Review(2016) 121 (1): 101-139.doi: 10.1093/ahr/121.1.101

CfP: Histories of Capitalism 2.0

Conference: Histories of Capitalism, v2.0

CALL FOR PAPERS

Histories of Capitalism, 2.0

Cornell University

September 29 to October 1, 2016

In 2014, Cornell’s History of Capitalism Initiative hosted a conference on the “Histories of American Capitalism” to showcase the deep connection between traditional subfields of social history (race, gender, sexuality and class) and the new history of capitalism. Building on the success of that conference and on developments in this rapidly-growing field, we invite proposals for panels that continue to illustrate the diversity of the histories of capitalism(s) through a variety of perspectives, including intellectual, legal, gender, environmental history, as well as the history of science and technology.

We hope that the previous conference’s focus, which sought to bring social and cultural history categories into dialogue with capitalism, will continue to infuse the conversation this year. We would also especially like to see panels and papers that incorporate non-U.S., regional, transnational, or global histories.

For the 2016 conference we are open to all proposals and particularly encourage submissions on:

  • Science and Technology
  • Migration
  • Unfree Labor
  • Family and Home
  • Environment and Built Environment
  • Criticizing, Defending and Defining Capitalism
  • Regulation and the State

Plenary Speakers include:

  • Jedidiah Purdy (Duke)
  • Marcus Rediker (Pittsburgh)
  • Emma Rothschild (Harvard University)
  • Juliet Walker (University of Texas-Austin)

 

Submission:

  • Our invitation is open to scholars at any stage of their careers. We will accept both panels and individual papers.
    • For each panel, please include a 500 word description of the panel, a 250 word description of each paper in the panel and a short c.v. for each paper giver.
    • For each paper, please submit a 250 word description of the paper and a short c.v.
  • To submit the paper proposals please go to http://hoc.ilr.cornell.edu/fall-2016-conference
  • Submissions are due by March 1, 2016

Call for Papers

We are currently accepting proposals for the 2016 conference.

Register for the Conference

Registration to attend the conference has not yet begun.

Please contact Rhonda Clouse with any questions or concerns.

CfP Globalisation in Business History

Special Issue Call for Papers: “Globalisation in Business History”

International Journal of Business and Globalisation

Guest Editor: Christopher M. Hartt, Dalhousie University, chris.hartt@dal.ca

Special Issue Description:

The Special Issue will focus on historical themes related to globalisation and business.  Business History is an inclusive discipline welcoming all fields, methods and perspectives, of enquiry related to management, entrepreneurism, economics, accounting, psychology, sociology, law or any other business related discipline as well as those from history.

The theme of the special issue relates to the growing debates related to current globalizing activities and the relationship between those debates and the historical context.  What has happened in the contested past? How is that relevant for the present and future? How do themes of competitiveness, profitability, and long-term sustainability interact with ethics, social responsibility and environmentalism in a global market? Have these themes emerged before and how did they impact trade?

The questions in the forgoing paragraph provide a small sample of appropriate submissions and should not constrain researchers.  Any manner of thought provoking and rigorous article engaging globalization and Business History is encouraged.

Please upload to http://www.inderscience.com/jhome.php?jcode=ijbg and keep your submission number for future reference.

Deadline for submissions: 31 July 2016

You can expect reviewer comments by 31 October

Revisions due 31 December for publication shortly thereafter

Selected References:

Anderson, Alistair R. “Conceptualising Entrepreneurship as Economic’explanation’and the Consequent Loss Of’understanding’.” International Journal of Business and Globalisation 14, no. 2 (2015): 145-57.

Ankersmit, F. R. “Historiography and Postmodernism.” In The Postmodern History Reader, edited by Keith Jenkins. London: Routledge, 1997.

Dunning, John H. The Globalization of Business (Routledge Revivals): The Challenge of the 1990s. Routledge, 2014.

Durepos, G., A.J. Mills, and J. Helms Mills. “Tales in the Manufacture of Knowledge: Writing a Business History of Pan American Airways.” Management & Organizational History 3, no. 1 (2008): 63-80.

Galanis, Mr Michael, and Mr Alan Dignam. The Globalization of Corporate Governance. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2013.

Gallhofer, Sonja, Jim Haslam, and Sibylle van der Walt. “Accountability and Transparency in Relation to Human Rights: A Critical Perspective Reflecting Upon Accounting, Corporate Responsibility and Ways Forward in the Context of Globalisation.” Critical Perspectives on Accounting 22, no. 8 (2011): 765-80.

Hartt, C., A.J. Mills, J.  Helms Mills, and L. Corrigan. “Sense-Making and Actor Networks: The Non-Corporeal Actant and the Making of an Air Canada History.” Management & Organizational History 9, no. 3 (2014/07/03 2014): 288-304.

Hartt, C., A.J. Mills, J. Helms Mills, and G. Durepos. “Markets, Organizations, Institutions and National Identity: Pan American Airways, Postcoloniality and Latin America.” Critical Perspectives on International Business 8, no. 1 (2012): 14-36.

Hopkins, Anthony G. Globalisation in World History. Random House, 2011.

Jenkins, K. Refiguring History. New Thoughts on an Old Discipline.  London: Routledge, 2003.

Pukall, Thilo J, and Andrea Calabrò. “The Internationalization of Family Firms a Critical Review and Integrative Model.” Family Business Review 27, no. 2 (2014): 103-25.

Rivera, Isaías R. “Global Age Cosmopolitanism.” International Journal of Business and Globalisation 9, no. 1 (2012): 90-105.

Rowlinson, M. . “Public History Review Essay: Cadbury World.” Labour History Review 67, no. 1 (2002): 101-19.

Suddaby, Roy, William M Foster, and Albert J Mills. “Historical Institutionalism.” Organizations in time: History, theory, methods  (2014): 100-23.

 

 

 

ToC: Business History March 2016

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

This new issue contains the following articles:

Articles
Pure diffusion? The great English hotel charges debate in The Times, 1853
David Bowie
Pages: 159-178
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1039521

The winds of change and the end of the Comprador System in the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
Andrew Smith
Pages: 179-206
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1041379

Networks of power and networks of capital: evidence from a peripheral area of the first globalisation. The energy sector in Naples: from gas to electricity (1862–1919)
Maria Carmela Schisani & Francesca Caiazzo
Pages: 207-243
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1071796

The European response to the challenge of the Japanese steel industry (1950–1980)
Pablo Díaz-Morlán & Miguel Sáez-García
Pages: 244-263
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1082545

The emergence of winemaking cooperatives in Catalonia
Jordi Planas
Pages: 264-282
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1082546

Business returns from gold price fixing and bullion trading on the interwar London market
Anthony John Arnold
Pages: 283-308
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1083012

Book Reviews
Building a market. The rise of the home improvement industry, 1914-1960
Peter Scott
Pages: 309-310
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031333

The triumph of emptiness; consumption, higher education and work organization
Philip Warwick
Pages: 310-312
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031334

Le crédit à la consommation en France, 1947–1965. De la stigmatisation à la réglementation
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 312-313
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1037580

Book Review
Le grand état-major financier: les inspecteurs des Finances, 1918–1946. Les hommes, le métier, les carrières
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 314-316
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1068516

ToC: Business History 58, 1 (2016) now available

Please note that this issue features an editorial on the special issue policy for the journal!

Business History, Volume 58, Issue 1, January 2016 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.

Special Issue: Business Groups around the World

This new issue contains the following articles:

Articles
Editorial: special issues in Business History
Andrea Colli, Stephanie Decker, Abe de Jong, Paloma Fernández Pérez, Neil Rollings & Ray Stokes
Pages: 1-5
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1060961

Business groups around the world: an introduction
María Inés Barbero & Nuria Puig
Pages: 6-29
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1051530

The only way to grow? Italian Business groups in historical perspective
Andrea Colli, Alberto Rinaldi & Michelangelo Vasta
Pages: 30-48
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044518

Business groups in Portugal in the Estado Novo period (1930–1974): family, power and structural change
Álvaro Ferreira da Silva, Luciano Amaral & Pedro Neves
Pages: 49-68
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044520

Business groups, entrepreneurship and the growth of the Koç Group in Turkey
Asli M. Colpan & Geoffrey Jones
Pages: 69-88
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044521

Imprints of an Entrepreneur and Evolution of a Business Group, 1948–2010
Mehmet Erçek & Öner Günçavdı
Pages: 89-110
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044522

The nexus between business groups and banks: Mexico, 1932–1982
Gustavo A. Del Angel
Pages: 111-128
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044519

‘Interlocked’ business groups and the state in Chile (1970–2010)
Erica Salvaj & Juan Pablo Couyoumdjian
Pages: 129-148
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1044517

Book Reviews
Reimagining business history
Robin Holt
Pages: 149-153
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1031325

Veuve Guérin & fils. Banque et soie. Une affaire de famille (Saint-Chamond-Lyon, 1716–1932)
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 153-155
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1016299

Historical and international comparison of business interest associations, 19th–20th Centuries
Hubert Bonin
Pages: 155-158
DOI: 10.1080/00076791.2015.1017288

CfP Historical Research on Institutional Change, due 31 March 2016

Business History Special Issue

Historical Research on Institutional Change

 Manuscripts should be submitted at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/fbsh before 31 March 2016.

Guest editors

Stephanie Decker, Aston University, UK, s.decker@aston.ac.uk
Lars Engwall, Uppsala University, Sweden, lars.engwall@fek.uu.se
Michael Rowlinson, Queen Mary University, London, m.rowlinson@qmul.ac.uk
Behlül Üsdiken, Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey, behlul@sabanciuniv.edu

Call for papers

The important role that institutions play for all forms of organizations has been recognized in a wide variety of disciplines. Douglass North’s (1990) book on the nature of institutional change in economic history was influential in both economics and history. Likewise has among others the article by DiMaggio and Powell’s (1983) been significant in sociology and organization studies. Nevertheless, the nature of institutional change has remained a heavily contested subject that has not seen the same degree of theoretical and empirical development.

Institutional change is by its very definition a process that unfolds over long time periods with fundamentally unpredictable outcomes that can only be properly evaluated with hindsight. Because institutional change is a fundamental feature in historical research, many historians do not necessarily define or reflect on this as a research phenomenon in its own right. On the other hand many research debates in organization studies have remained curiously a-historical when developing the antecedents, outcomes and mediating factors for processes of institutionalization, institutional maintenance, and deinstitutionalization (Dacin, Munir and Tracey, 2010).

Nevertheless, between these two extremes there are many processes of institutional change in organizations that develop over time periods that are too long to research with the standard methods of qualitative social science such as interviews or participant observations. Here some historical approaches based on archival research may create more interesting research designs (Wright and Zammuto, 2013). Historical theory also has different insights to offer organization studies (Rowlinson, Hassard and Decker, 2014). It is in these areas that management and organizational history could contribute by investigating phenomena from a more long-term perspective. Suddaby, Foster and Mills (2014) have similarly argued for a more historical institutionalism to address unresolved issues in institutional theory, such as the paradox of embedded agency.

Within business and organizational history, there is an increasing interest in questions of theory and methodology. Alternative approaches, not just those drawn from the social sciences, but also from historiography, such as oral history or microhistory, offer new ways of approaching research. Historians interpret institutional theory in different ways from organization scholars (Rowlinson and Hassard, 2013), which offers new avenues for interdisciplinary dialogue.

Submissions may address the following issues and questions, although this list is not exclusive:

  • The five C’s of historical thinking (change over time, context, contingency, causality and complexity) and the possibilities of institutional theory (Andrews and Burke, 2007).
  • New institutional theory in organizational sociology has lost the focus of old institutionalism on issues of politics and power. Would historical institutionalism offer a useful corrective?
  • Alternative methodologies for historical institutionalism: oral history, microhistory, ANTi-history.
  • Institutional transplants beyond legal and economic history.
  • Institutional entrepreneurs and institutional work – the return of historical actors and contingent decision-making.
  • Institutional logics or politically-motivated ideologies: old wine in new bottles?
  • Routines, practices and process vs. the eventful temporality of history.
  • Beyond path dependency in explaining long-term structural change in historical perspective.

We hope to attract papers with a long-term perspective focusing on institutions, organizations as well as on organizational fields. We envisage that papers will be empirically rich but also they are linked to current institutional theories. In addition we shall also consider theoretically or methodologically oriented contributions provided they address both historical and institutional theory concerns.

About the guest editors

Stephanie Decker is Professor of Organization Studies and History at Aston Business School, UK. As a historian working at a business school, most of her work is concerned with the relation between organization theory and history. She is co-editor of ‘Business History’ and is the recipient of the prestigious Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship 2014-15, as well as the principal organizer of a seminar series on organizational history funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (UK). She co-authored “Research Strategies for Organizational History” (Academy of Management Review, 2014) with Michael Rowlinson and John Hassard.

Lars Engwall is Professor Emeritus of Business Administration at Uppsala University. His research has been directed towards the development of industries and organizations as well as the creation and diffusion of management knowledge. Among his publications related to the sub-theme can be mentioned Mercury Meets Minerva (2009/1992), Management Consulting (2002, ed. with Matthias Kipping), The Expansion of Management Knowledge (2002, ed. with Kerstin Sahlin-Andersson), and Reconfiguring Knowledge Production (2010 with Richard Whitley and Jochen Gläser).

Michael Rowlinson is Professor of Management and Organizational History in the School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London. He has published widely on the relationship between history and organization theory in journals such as the Academy of Management Review, Business History, Human Relations, Organization, and Organization Studies. His research on corporate history concerns the representation of history by organizations, especially the dark side of their involvement in war, slavery, and racism. This has been published in journals such as Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Journal of Organizational Change Management, and Labour History Review. His current interests include the methodology of interpretive historical research in organization studies. He edited the Journal Management & Organizational History from 2008 to 2013 and he is now a Senior Editor for Organization Studies and a co-editor for the Special Topic Forum of the Academy of Management Review on ‘History and Organization Studies: Toward a Creative Synthesis.’

Behlül Üsdiken is Professor of Management and Organization at Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey. Previously, he was a professor at Bogazici University. He has contributed to numerous journals as well as a variety of edited collections. He has served as a Co-editor of Organization Studies in 1996–2001 and a Section Editor of the Journal of Management Inquiry in 2007–2012. His current research focuses upon family business groups, management education and universities.

References

Andrews, T. and Burke, F. (2007). What Does It Mean to Think Historically? Perspectives on History 45, 1: 32-35.

Dacin, M.T., Munir, K. and Tracey, P. (2010) Formal Dining at Cambridge colleges: Linking ritual performance and institutional maintenance. Academy of Management Journal 53, 6: 1393-1418.

DiMaggio, P.J. and Powell, W. W. (1983) The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields. American Sociological Review 48,2: 147-160.

North, D.C. (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Rowlinson, M. and Hassard, J. (2013). Historical Neo-institutionalism or Neo-institutionalist Jistory? Historical Research in Management and Organization Studies. Management & Organizational History 8, 2: 111-126.

Rowlinson, M., Hassard, J., and Decker, S. (2014). Research Strategies for Organizational History: A Dialogue between Historical Theory and Organization Theory. Academy of Management Review 39,3: 205-274.

Suddaby, R., Foster, W. M., and Mills, A. J. (2014). Historical Institutionalism. Organizations in Time: History, Theory, Methods. Ed. By M. Bucheli and R. D. Wadhwani. Oxford, Oxford University Press: 100-123.

Wright, A. L. and Zammuto, R. F. (2013). Wielding the Willow: Processes of Institutional change in Englısh County Cricket. Academy of Management Journal, 56(1), 308–330.