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4 - Technology as an occasion for structuring: evidence from observations of CT scanners and the social order of radiology departments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2010

Gerry Johnson
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
Ann Langley
Affiliation:
HEC Montreal, Canada
Leif Melin
Affiliation:
Jönköping International Business School, Sweden
Richard Whittington
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Abstract

New medical imaging devices, such as the CT scanner, have begun to challenge traditional role relations among radiologists and radiological technologists. Under some conditions, these technologies may actually alter the organizational and occupational structure of radiological work. However, current theories of technology and organizational form are insensitive to the potential number of structural variations implicit in role-based change. This paper expands recent sociological thought on the link between institution and action to outline a theory of how technology might occasion different organizational structures by altering institutionalized roles and patterns of interaction. In so doing, technology is treated as a social rather than a physical object, and structure is conceptualized as a process rather than an entity. The implications of the theory are illustrated by showing how identical CT scanners occasioned similar structuring processes in two radiology departments and yet led to divergent forms of organization. The data suggest that to understand how technologies alter organizational structures researchers may need to integrate the study of social action and the study of social form.

Editors' introduction

This is not a paper that claims to be about strategy, but it is highly relevant to this book for three reasons. First it is an extremely well designed piece of micro-level research. Second it is a rare example of the links in figure 1.1 in chapter 1, both of the interrelationship of institutional forces and activities (V3) and also of how activities influence organizational outcomes (V1). Third, it is a truly exemplar paper in terms of its style and structure.

Type
Chapter
Information
Strategy as Practice
Research Directions and Resources
, pp. 83 - 100
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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