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EGOS 2023 CfP – Organizing in Historically Marginalized Societies

  • 1.  EGOS 2023 CfP – Organizing in Historically Marginalized Societies

    Posted 12-04-2022 11:44

    Hi friends and colleagues,

    If you are to attend EGOS 2023 in Cagliari, we would like to attract your attention to our EGOS sub-theme: "Theorizing Organizing in 'Historically Marginalized Societies': Embracing, Calibrating or Distancing from Mainstream Organizational and Management Theories?"

    Format: Hybrid | Deadline for submitting the abstract: January 10, 2023, 23:59:59 CET.

    Convenors: Sofiane Baba (University of Sherbrooke), Innan Sasaki (Warwick University) and Taïeb Hafsi (HEC Montréal).

    Link to the CfP: https://www.egos.org/2023_Cagliari/SUB-THEMES_Call-for-Short-Papers?subtheme_id=1637466365774

    Should you have any questions, please send us an email at sofiane.baba@usherbrooke.ca, innan.sasaki@wbs.ac.uk, or taieb.2.hafsi@hec.ca.

    All the best,

    The convenors

    ****

    Historically marginalized societies are those societies that have experienced oppression, marginalization, and cultural genocide from a more dominant force at some point in their recent history through colonization, wars, and other forms of domination (e.g., Baba, Sasaki, & Vaara, 2021). Despite gaining their freedom and independence, many of these societies are coping with historical marginalization's long-term psychological and sociological effects (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015). As a result, these societies continue to be tied with colonial legacy and institutions imposed by the dominant force while deliberately ignoring local identities. This situation generates strong tensions for these societies as they seek to (re)imagine their future ideal society as characterized by their unique identity and values (Djilali, 2017). It is all people's right to be valued for who they are and for the cultural values and traditions they uphold. However, history and today's society show that such fundamental human right is not always respected. In this vein, this sub-theme delves into the theorization of organizing in historically marginalized societies where cultural survival is vital, both in developing and developed countries. In particular, this sub-theme seeks to understand how actors navigate through these historical legacies, how they become who they really are, and how they try to influence the future of their society.
     
    These societies are scattered worldwide, from the First Nations of Canada to those of Australia, from Northern Africa to Southern Africa, including Latin American countries and many more. These societies tend to have strong ontological differences from the Western view, i.e., circular view of time rather than linear, a strong role of traditions, religious beliefs and spirituality, collectivist societies rather than individualistic (Baba & Fortin-Lefebvre, 2021; Cilliers, 2018). While they are different, these societies are also simultaneously searching for themselves and their uniqueness (Stora, 2021). Historically marginalized societies have lost both material and symbolic resources due to colonization, wars, and other forms of domination (Bourdieu, 1962). Such loss is often followed by coping mechanisms like mourning, resistance, escaping, or accepting and adapting to survive (e.g., Alkhaled & Sasaki, 2021; Martí & Fernández, 2013). However, these losses have long-lasting effects, which scholars are still discovering. From what we know, they lead to instability in the society marked by historically deeply rooted ideological and political conflicts, to institutional voids, and overall, to identity issues (Harbi, 2001). But a common objective in these societies is usually the struggle to culturally survive and uphold their unique traditions, cultures, and way of life while being influenced by more dominant cultural values and systems, especially emanating from the dominant forces and former colonizers (Fortin-Lefebvre & Baba, 2021).
     
    The Age of Enlightenment, the pivotal period of modernity, is probably still central to our vision of management and organizations: effectiveness, efficiency, rationality being the mottoes. In this quest to rationalize the behavior of organizations, management, and organizational theories have never been so abundant and popular. Paradoxically, these theories have never been so criticized for their questionable utility, the process that shapes them (Filatotchev, Ireland, & Stahl, 2022), their Western hegemony (Bruton et al., 2022), and their impacts on ecosystems (Parker, 2002). We build on Petriglieri's (2020) insight that we need to put "to rest the way we conceive and portray and practice management" and that we "need a truly human management, one that makes room for our bodies and spirits alongside our intellect and skills".
     
    All in all, theoretically, it is worthwhile theorizing how actors in such historically marginalized societies organize themselves because management and organization theories remain considerably colored by Western realities and phenomena and this, for a long time (Kiggundu, Jørgensen, & Hafsi, 1983). Overall, we are interested in studies from around the world that explore and unpack how the culture, worldviews, and everyday life (individual, social and institutional) of historically marginalized contexts (re)shape our understanding of organizing and organizations. More specifically, with such an idea in mind, we suggest (but should not be limited to) the following possible research questions. Empirical, conceptual, as well as methodological papers are welcomed. Examples of research questions of interest are listed in the CfP.

    Dr Innan Sasaki

    Associate Professor, Organisation and Work,

    Warwick Business School,

    University of Warwick,

    Coventry, CV4 7AL.

    Work Tel: +44 24 765 24267 

    Email: innan.sasaki@wbs.ac.uk

    https://www.wbs.ac.uk/about/person/SASAKII

     



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    Innan Sasaki
    COVENTRY
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