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Institutional economics 3 Institutionenökonomik 3 Administrative reform 1 Canada 1 China 1 Corporate Social Responsibility 1 Corporate social responsibility 1 Elite 1 Emerging economies 1 Ethnic discrimination 1 Ethnische Diskriminierung 1 Gerechtigkeit 1 Großbritannien 1 India 1 Indien 1 Justice 1 Kanada 1 Nachhaltige Kapitalanlage 1 Public administration 1 Public sector 1 Schwellenländer 1 Sustainable investment 1 United Kingdom 1 Verwaltungsreform 1 Öffentliche Verwaltung 1 Öffentlicher Sektor 1
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Undetermined 13
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Article 13
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English 13
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Greenwood, Royston 2 Lounsbury, Michael 2 Amis, John M. 1 Ansari, Shaz 1 Brandtner, Christof 1 Bromley, Patricia 1 Christiansen, Lærke Højgaard 1 Davis, Gerald F. 1 Ferraro, Fabrizio 1 Garud, Raghu 1 Gehman, Joel 1 Höllerer, Markus A. 1 Kroezen, Jochem J. 1 Lu, Chang 1 Meyer, Renate E. 1 Mezias, Stephen J. 1 Ozturk, Ilay H. 1 Polzer, Tobias 1 Reay, Trish 1 Schloderer, Florian 1 Seiwald, Johann 1 Tharchen, Thinley 1 Tompkins-Stange, Megan 1 Vermeulen, Patrick 1 Wooten, Melissa E. 1 Yan, Shipeng 1
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How institutions matter! 13
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ECONIS (ZBW) 13
Showing 1 - 10 of 13
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Prelims
Gehman, Joel (ed.); Lounsbury, Michael (ed.);  … - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. i-x). 2016
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365666
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“Walk the Line”: How Institutional Influences Constrain Elites
Brandtner, Christof; Bromley, Patricia; … - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 281-309). 2016
Private foundations in the United States are powerful actors in contemporary society. Their influence stems in part from their lack of accountability – they operate free from market pressures or finding sources of funding, and they are not subject to formal democratic systems of checks and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365668
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Institutional Constraints on the Pursuit of Racial Justice
Wooten, Melissa E. - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 261-280). 2016
Institutions have the capacity to constrain and regulate behavior. Social problems and their remedies are not exempt from this reality. Consequently, actors attempting to ameliorate pressing problems must do so within the existing frameworks of acceptable and unacceptable paths toward justice....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365669
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State Mediation in Market Emergence: Socially Responsible Investing in China
Yan, Shipeng; Ferraro, Fabrizio - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 173-206). 2016
Socially responsible investing (SRI) funds depart from mainstream finance by incorporating environmental, social, and governance considerations, but their success varies across regions. By using a historical comparative case design, we identify an empirically puzzling phenomenon in China:...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365673
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Institutional Hybridity in Public Sector Reform: Replacement, Blending, or Layering of Administrative Paradigms
Polzer, Tobias; Meyer, Renate E.; Höllerer, Markus A.; … - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 69-99). 2016
Despite an abundance of studies on hybridization and hybrid forms of organizing, scholarly work has failed to distinguish consistently between specific types of hybridity. As a consequence, the analytical category has become blurred and lacks conceptual clarity. Our paper discusses hybridity as...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365675
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Preserving a Settlement despite Ongoing Challenges: The Case of Native Indian Gaming
Lu, Chang; Reay, Trish - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 1-35). 2016
We investigated how an institutional settlement concerning Native Indian gaming (the operation of gambling establishments such as casinos or bingo halls by Native Indian tribes) was preserved over time in spite of three significant challenges. Building on previous literature on settlements and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365677
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About the Authors
In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 323-329). 2016
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365665
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Organization Theory and the Dilemmas of a Post-Corporate Economy
Davis, Gerald F. - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 311-322). 2016
Ubiquitous information and communication technologies are radically changing what organizations look like, and in many cases rendering formal organizations unsustainable. As ongoing organizations are replaced by supply chains and pop-up enterprises, we face renewed philosophical questions around...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365667
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The Performative Puzzle: How Institutions Matter in Marginalizing and Reconstituting Identities
Garud, Raghu; Tharchen, Thinley - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 235-260). 2016
Institutional arrangements, while constituting subject positions, also relegate others to inhabit unlivable abject positions. Such a perspective on identity begs the question on the possibilities of institutional reform given that abjects must seek recourse, if any, from the very institutions...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365670
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Intra-Professional Status, Maintenance Failure, and the Reformation of the Scottish Civil Justice System
Ozturk, Ilay H.; Amis, John M.; Greenwood, Royston - In: How institutions matter!, (pp. 207-234). 2016
The Scottish civil justice system is undergoing its most substantive transformation in over 150 years. This reformation will create new judicial bodies, alter the jurisdictional reach of courts, and drastically unsettle what has been, up to now, a highly stable institutional field. These changes...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015365671
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