Phenomenological assumptions and knowledge dissemination within organizational studies

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Phenomenological assumptions and knowledge di ...
Corinne Bendersky
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 31, 2022 | History

Phenomenological assumptions and knowledge dissemination within organizational studies

Rev.
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Phenomenological assumptions—assumptions about the fundamental qualities of the phenomenon being studied and how it relates to the environment in which it occurs—affect the dissemination of knowledge from subfields to the broader field of study. Micro-process research in organizational studies rests on implicit phenomenological assumptions that vary in the extent to which micro-processes are viewed as parts of larger systems. We suggest that phenomenological assumptions linking micro-processes to organizational contexts highlight the relevance of micro-process research findings to broader organizational questions, and therefore increase the likelihood that the findings will disseminate to the larger field of organizational research. We test this assertion by analyzing studies of negotiation published in top peer-reviewed management, psychology, sociology, and industrial relations journals from 1990 to 2005. Our findings reveal a continuum of open systems to closed systems phenomenological assumptions in negotiation research. Analysis of the citation rates of the articles in our data set by non-negotiation organizational research indicates that more open systems assumptions increase the likelihood that a negotiation article will be cited in organizational studies, after controlling for other, previously identified effects on citation rates. Our findings suggest that subfields can increase the impact they have on the broader intellectual discourse by situating their phenomena in rich contexts that illuminate the connections between their findings and questions of interest to the broader field.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
38

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Book Details


Edition Notes

"Revised March 2009"--Publisher's web site.

Includes bibliographical references.

Published in
[Boston
Series
Working paper / Harvard Business School -- 09-043, Working paper (Harvard Business School) -- 09-043.

The Physical Object

Pagination
38 p.
Number of pages
38

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL45155835M
OCLC/WorldCat
542322012

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