Managing Change in Pluralistic Organizations: The Role of Normative Accountability Assumptions
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Abstract
Pluralistic organizations face the challenge of managing the co
existence of multiple sets of assumptions associated with each
institutional logic. This multiplicity of assumptions problematizes
the findings from the change management literature that for
successful change management, the normative assumptions of the
change initiative should be congruent with the organizational
normative assumptions. One of the organizational mechanisms in
which the normative assumptions are encoded and enacted is the
system of accountability, hence in pluralistic organizations, there is
a need to understand the role of the interplay of the normative
accountability assumptions of the change initiative with the
multiple sets of accountability assumptions representing individual
logics within the organization. This study examines the case of a
project to renew a strategic framework of a Canadian public
university. The project diverged from the existing governance
practices and their associated accountability assumptions that
represented the institutional logic of managerialism. We found that
this project was widely accepted, despite deviating from the
institutional logic that supported existing practices, because its
accountability assumptions were congruent with co-existing and
deeply-rooted, democratic logic within the organization. Our
f
indings contribute to the change management literature by
highlighting the role of normative accountability assumptions in
change management within pluralistic organizations.