How Organizational Theory can Help Network Theorizing: Linking Structure and Dynamics via Cross-Level Analogies
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Published:2014
Omar Lizardo, Melissa Fletcher Pirkey, 2014. "How Organizational Theory can Help Network Theorizing: Linking Structure and Dynamics via Cross-Level Analogies", Contemporary Perspectives on Organizational Social Networks
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Abstract
Traditionally, organizational theory has been a receptacle of methods and mechanisms from network theory. In this paper, we argue that organizational theory can also be an active contributor to network theory’s conceptual development. To that end, we make explicit a theoretical strategy that has only been used informally by network theorists so far, which – following Vaughan (2002) – we refer to as analogical theorizing. Using the basic correspondence between dyadic relationships as the most minimal form of “organization,” we show that processes and mechanisms extracted from various theoretical strands of organizational theory can be mapped onto the dynamics of social relationships. This allows us to build novel theoretical insight as it pertains to issue of relationship emergence, maintenance, and decay in social networks.
