理解组织演化:迈向使用广义达尔文主义的研究议程

Understanding Organizational Evolution: Toward a Research Agenda using Generalized Darwinism

ORGANIZATION STUDIES · 2013
被引 106
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

澄清了组织研究中‘演化’与‘共演化’的模糊用法,提出广义达尔文主义框架,帮助理解选择与适应的交织、组织惯例、战略选择及复杂性增长,并弥合商业战略与组织生态学的分歧。

Abstract

The terms ‘evolution’ and ‘coevolution’ are widely used in organization studies but rarely defined. Often it is unclear whether they refer to single entities or populations. When specific evolutionary processes are suggested, the labelling is often misleading. For example, in the debate over the roles of individual adaptation and competitive selection, the ‘selectionist’ position of Michael Hannan and John Freeman, which emphasizes the role of selection and stress the limits of individual firm adaptability, is often described as ‘Darwinian’ whereas opposing views that emphasize adaptability are described as ‘Lamarckian’. But these labels are not strictly dichotomous. Scholars have shown that core Darwinian principles, resulting from abstract ontological communality rather than analogy, apply to social evolution. This opens up a research agenda using the principles of generalized Darwinism and the replicator–interactor framework to help understand the evolution of organizations. Some illustrations of the conceptual value of this approach are provided, including understanding the entwinement of selection and adaptation, the nature and role of organizational routines, the place of strategic choice and the growth of organizational complexity. The framework of generalized Darwinism also helps to bridge apparently divergent perspectives in the business strategy and organizational ecology literatures.

组织演化广义达尔文主义组织生态学商业战略