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        last updated 10/2/2006 
		 Critical 
		Approaches to 
		Organization 
		  Premise:  Power and Control is 
		central to organizational life.  Organizations are locations of domination.
 
		  Some Sources of Power: 
		(from G. Morgan. 
		
		(1986) 
		Images of 
		Organization. Sage, 159.) 
			
			
			Control of Scarce Resources
			
			Use of Organization (cultural) 
			resources:  structure, rules, norms, values, symbols
			
			Control of decision-making (the hidden 
			face of power)
			
			Control of information
			
			Alliances, etc.
			
			Control of technology 
		  
		Control of discourse
 (see 2 and 3 above) from
		S. Deetz 
			
			
			Communication is constitutive, forming perceptions, never value 
			free, often metaphorical
			There 
			are four ways control/decision-making (individual or collective, exclusive 
			or inclusive) is accomplished 
				
				
				Strategy:  
				"managerialism," - a systematic embrace of practices that assume 
				control is the ultimate organizational value. It depends on minimizing the 
				ability of any but managers to influence the organization - 
				often yields resistance.  
				
				Consent:  willing 
				assent to managers decisions, 
				but often unreflected upon.  It usually involves "buy-in" to the management view - 
				loyalty.
				
				Involvement:  
				includes an 
				ability to express individual needs and views on the 
				organization's direction - forums exist but not necessarily influence.
				
				Participation:  meaningful, 
				democratic participation by "stakeholders" (cultural 
				participants) without privileging managerial or purely financial 
				interests.
			
			Systematically Distorted Communication 
			blocks achievement of the Critical Approach goal of participation.(the 
			hidden face of power, suppression of conflict, discursive closure) 
			by participants' thinking their interests are something that is not 
			really in the participants' interests (e.g.: "Pay cuts will save all 
			our jobs"). |