Chapter 7 Integrating Multiple Voices: Working with Collusion in Multiparty Collaborations
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Published:2010
Barbara Gray, Sandra Schruijer, 2010. "Chapter 7 Integrating Multiple Voices: Working with Collusion in Multiparty Collaborations", Relational Practices, Participative Organizing, Chris Steyaert, Bart Van Looy
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The idea that relational processes are central to knowledge creation and knowledge sharing is an idea in good currency (Bouwen & Taillieu, 2004; Brown & Duguid, 1996; Wenger, 1998). Rather than considering knowledge as a commodity that can be transferred from one mind to another, when knowledge is viewed as a relational practice, it resides in social interactions and is actualized in common practices that evolve within a particular community of practice (Sternberg & Horvath, 1999; Van Looy, Debackere, & Bouwen, 2000). Thus, knowledge is both embedded and emergent — subject to change as participants in a community interact with one another. To understand what is known, it becomes necessary to study how members of an organizational community interact and how their knowledge shifts over time.
