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Social and Organizational Theories of Transformation - 4 ECTS Postponed
Date and time
Monday 13 May 2024 at 12:30 to Friday 17 May 2024 at 13:30
Registration Deadline
Tuesday 9 April 2024 at 23:55
Location
Porcelænshaven - room PH18B 1.18 (first floor),
Porcelænshaven 16B,
2000 Frederiksberg
Porcelænshaven - room PH18B 1.18 (first floor)
Porcelænshaven 16B
2000 Frederiksberg
Social and Organizational Theories of Transformation - 4 ECTS Postponed
Course coordinators: Poul Fritz Kjær & Mathias Hein Jessen, Department of Business Humanities and Law (BHL)
Faculty
The student must be registered on compatible PhD-programme. In order to participate in the course, the student must submit a 5-page essay in advance of the course, at the latest 1 May 2024 in which the student discusses and reflects about the role of transformation in their PhD-project. In order to receive the course diploma, participants have to be present during the whole course period, have read the literature, engage actively in teaching and discussions. After the conclusion of the course, the student must submit an essay (max. 10 pages), based on the initial essay, engaging with the theories and discussions of the class in relation to the student’s own PhD-project.
We live in a world defined by crises and transformation. Environmental degradation, climate crisis, financial crisis, populism, pandemics, military conflicts, falling legitimacy of political and economic elites and institutions, and many more. As a result, organizations and businesses are increasingly focusing on transformation as a way to encounter the ‘crisis of legitimacy’ confronting the current setup of economy and society, just as politicians and policy-makers on all sides of the political spectrum calls for the economy to be more thoroughly (re-)embedded within society.
Module 1: Theories of transformation
This module introduces to the course in general, the approach, the current problems and challenges that we encounter, as well as introducing to a number of social theory paradigms of transformation. It asks the fundamental question: where does transformation come from and who are the agents of transformation? It also outlines how transformation has been and can be thought.
Module 2: Transforming political economy
This module goes into depth with theories of capitalism, its development as well as different critiques of it. The module introduces different ways of thinking the economy, economic relations and the role of organizations, business and corporations within it. It outlines the historical transformation in the conception and organization of political economies and goes into discussions about forms of reimagining capitalism and alternative economies, societies and communities.
Module 3: Transforming the corporation
This module goes into depth with the most dominant organizational form of our economy: the corporation. The module introduces to the history and evolution of the corporation form, and its congealment in the private, publicly owned multinational corporation. It also introduces to recent critical theories of the corporation and a political theory of the corporation as well as alternatives to the corporations and attempts to transform it through cooperatively- and worker-owned corporations, workplace democracy and purpose.
Module 4: Transforming the workplace
This model explores different ways to democratize the workplace as well as discusses the various historical, political, and conceptual reasons why such a democratization might be desirable. In addition, the module will introduce theories of ‘post-work’ society in political theory and political economy, i.e., theories concerning the transformation of the workplace in specific and labour markets in general due to increased automation and other technological developments.
Module 5: Transforming organizing
This module focuses on the theory and practice of 'alternative organizations’ as discussed in management and organization studies. It interrogates the notion of alternatives by exploring the normative foundations, practices and challenges of ‘organizing differently’. It introduces critical frameworks for studying such organizations and explores alternative conceptions of innovation, leadership, diversity and digitalism that seek to challenge the prevailing dominance of shareholder value, growth and competition in capitalist organizing.
The course consists of 5 modules, each taking up a different theme. Each module consists of lectures, discussions and case work. Each module will introduce a theoretical and critical approach to a dominant aspect of our current economic situation, as well as approaches to its transformation.
Lecture plan
Day 1: Monday
Module 1: Theories of transformation
12:30-13:00: Welcome and introduction (Poul F. Kjaer & Mathias Hein Jessen)
13.00-14:30 Session 1: Lecture: Paradigms of transformation (Poul F. Kjaer & Mathias Hein Jessen)
15:00-16:30: Session 2: Workshop: Introductions (Poul F. Kjaer & Mathias Hein Jessen)
18:30: Welcome dinner.
Day 2: Tuesday
Module 2: Transforming political economy
09.00-10.30: Session 3: Lecture: Defining, historicizing and criticizing capitalism (Mathias Hein Jessen/Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen)
11.00-12.30: Session 4: Lecture: Three paradigms of political economy: corporatism, neo-corporatism and governance (Poul F. Kjaer)
12:30-13:30: Lunch
13:30-15: Session 5: Lecture: Transformation through competition (law) (Poul F. Kjær)
Day 3: Wednesday
Module 3: Transforming the corporation
09:00-10:30: Session 6: Lecture: The corporate form and shareholder value maximization (Mathias Hein Jessen)
11:00-12:30: Session 7: Lecture: The political theory of the corporation (Mathias Hein Jessen)
12:30-13:30: Lunch
13:30-15:30 Session 8: Paper discussions (Mathias Hein Jessen/Poul F. Kjær)
Day 4: Thursday
Module 4: Transforming the workplace
09:00-10:30: Session 9: Lecture: Workplace democracy and democratic business (Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen)
11:00-12:30: Session 10: Discussion: Post-work society (Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen)
12:30-13:30: Lunch
13:30-15:30: Session 11: Paper discussions (Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen/Mathias Hein Jessen)
Day 5: Friday
Module 5: Transforming organizing
09.00-10.30: Session 13: Lecture: Organizing for change: Defining alternative organizations (Birke Otto)
11.00-12.30: Session 14: Discussion: Practicing alternative organizing (Birke Otto)
12:30-13:30: Lunch, evaluation and goodbye (Mathias Hein Jessen & Poul F. Kjær)
Readings (preliminary list)
Anderson, E. (2019). Private government: How employers rule our lives (and why we don't talk about it). Princeton: Princeton University Press. Chapter 2: Private government, pp. 37-71.
Blair, M.M. (2013). Corporate Personhood and the Corporate Persona, University of Illinois Law Review, pp. 775-820.
Chen, K.K. & Chen, V.T. (2021). “What If” and “If Only” Futures Beyond Conventional Capitalism and Bureaucracy: Imagining Collectivist and Democratic Possibilities for Organizing. Research in the Sociology of Organizations, (72), pp. 1-28.
Ciepley, D. (2013). Beyond public and private: Toward a political theory of the corporation. American Political Science Review, 107(1), pp. 139-158.
Davis, G. F. (2016). Can an Economy Survive Without Corporations? Technology and Robust Organizational Alternatives. Academy of Management Perspectives, 30(2), pp. 129–140.
Ehrnström, M. & Biese, I. (2022). The act of (de/re)growing: Prefiguring
alternative organizational landscapes. Human Relations, pp. 1-22.
Ferreras, I. (2017). Firms as political entities: Saving democracy through economic bicameralism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Introduction: ‘What about the Workers?’, pp. 1-20.
Foucault, M. (1984). What is Enlightenment?, in: P. Rabinow (ed.), The Foucault Reader, New York: Pantheon Books, pp. 32-50.
Fotaki, M. and Foroughi, H. (2021). Extinction Rebellion: Green Activism and the Fantasy of Leaderlessness in a Decentralized Movement. Leadership 0(0), pp. 1-23
Fraser, N. & Jaeggi, R. (2018). Capitalism. A Conversation in Critical Theory, Cambridge: Polity Press. Chapter 1: ’Conceptualizing Capitalism’, pp. 13-47.
Friedman, M. (1970). A Friedman doctrine – The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase Its Profits, The New York Times, September 13.
Hayek, F.v. (1944). The Road to Serfdom, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, (condensed version, published in the Reader’s Digest, April 1945 edition, pp. 39-70.
Kjaer, P.F. (2014). Towards a Sociology of Intermediary Institutions: The Role of Law in Corporatism, Neo-Corporatism and Governance. In M.R. Madsen and C. Thornhill (eds.), Law and the Formation of Modern Europe: Perspectives from the Historical Sociology of Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 117 - 141.
Kjaer, P.F. (2015). Context Construction through Competition: The Prerogative of Public Power, Intermediary Institutions and the Expansion of Statehood through Competition. Distinktion, 16(2), pp. 146-166.
Polanyi, K., (2001)[1944]. The Great Transformation. The Political and Economic Origins of our Time Boston: Beacon press. Chapter 5 & 6, ‘Evolution of the Market Pattern’ & ‘The Self-Regulating Market and the Fictitious Commodities: Labor, Land, and Money’, pp. 59-80.
The course offers insight into:·
- Various theoretical paradigms and approaches to transformation·
- Theoretical understandings of the relation between the economy and society, as well as contemporary challenges
- Historical, contemporary and future transformations of corporate constitutions and organizational forms, e.g. stakeholder models, shareholder models, cooperative models
- Economic, political, legal, sociological, philosophical and historical approaches to corporate and organizational forms and governance in a societal perspective, with a focus on societal legitimation struggles
- Alternative organizational forms and other ways and approaches to transforming economy, work and society.
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Registration deadline and conditions
The registration deadline is 03 April 2024. If you want to cancel your registration on the course it should be done prior to this mentioned date. By this date we determine whether we have enough registrations to run the course, or who should be offered a seat if we have received too many registrations.
If there are more seats available on the course we leave the registration open by setting a new regsitration deadline in order to fill remaining seats. Once you have received our acceptance/welcome letter to join the course, your registration is binding and we do not refund your course fee. The binding registration date will be the registration deadline mentioned above.
Payment methods
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Please note that your registration is binding after the registration deadline.
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Organizer Contact Information
CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk
Organizer Contact Information
CBS PhD School
Nina Iversen
Phone: +45 3815 2475
ni.research@cbs.dk