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27th EGOS Colloquium, Gothenburg, July 7–9, 2011
Reassembling Organizations
Knowledge about assembling and reassembling organizations is now more important than ever. In the light of the current economic
crisis, globalization, sustainable futures, financial regulation and social welfare are issues of immense importance for the
second decade of this century. There will be a demand for organizational and institutional innovations to deal with these
problems and this will have implications for both management practice and our understanding of organizations.
The term "organization" – as used by scholars as well as practitioners – is ambiguous. Organization is used both
as a noun and an adjective in "organization studies". As an adjective, it is used to indicate something ordered, stabilized
and structured; as a noun, its meaning has shifted from denoting "association" to referring to a type of quasi-object or tool.
Rather than focusing attention on how it has been constructed, the concept is frequently used in a way that makes tacit assumptions
about the nature of what has been put together. One task of the organization theorist should therefore be to expose the contradictions
that result from their ready and routine acceptance.
It can be said that organization practitioners and theoreticians have constructed a kind of a Golem – a clay monster,
to fight for them against the threatening world outside – but have forgotten the remaining part of the myth, in which
Golem turns against those who constructed it. Similarly, an organization built primarily to serve the interests of its creators
can become their oppressor. Alternatively, organizations can themselves become something even bigger – sectors, fields,
industries, governments, meta-organizations – how does it happen and why? Who does it mean for the trust we have in
organizations?
In practice, it is the proficiency in setting things together – objects, quasi-objects, ideas and people – that
is central. In the world of theory, we also strive for proficiency – in showing how assembling is done and undone. In
this conference, we can focus on such assembling and reassembling; together, we can share our concerns, our achievements,
our theoretical shelters and expand our linguistic breathing space.
Trade, shipping and international contacts have been part of Gothenburg ever since the city was founded in 1621. The city
has been through considerable industrial restructuring in the past, but is now one of the most dynamic industrial centers
in Europe. Reassembling organizations is therefore an activity well-practiced in Gothenburg!
Local Organizing Committee
Email: egos2011@mgmt.gu.se
Ola Bergström, Associate Professor
Petra Adolfsson, Assistant Professor
Barbara Czarniawska, Professor
barbara.czarniawska@gri.gu.se
Ulla Eriksson-Zetterquist, Associate Professor
ulla.eriksson-zetterquist@gri.gu.se
For more information about Gothenburg, please visit www.goteborg.com
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Future EGOS Colloquia
27th EGOS Colloquium
Gothenburg University
Gothenburg, Sweden
July 7–9, 2011
28th EGOS Colloquium
Aalto University & Hanken School of Economics
Helsinki, Finland
July 5–7, 2012
29th EGOS Colloquium
HEC Montréal
Montréal, Canada
July 4–6, 2013
