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Status in Management and Organizations

Details

  • 11 b/w illus. 7 tables
  • Page extent: 374 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.72 kg

Library of Congress

  • Dewey number: 306.3/6
  • Dewey version: 22
  • LC Classification: HM791 .S73 2011
  • LC Subject headings:
    • Organizational sociology
    • Organizational behavior
    • Industrial sociology
    • Social status
    • Prestige

Library of Congress Record

Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521115452)

People go to extraordinary lengths to gain and defend their status. Those with higher status are listened to more, receive more deference from others, and are perceived as having more power. People with higher status also tend to have better health and longevity. In short, status matters. Despite the importance of status, particularly in the workplace, it has received comparatively little attention from management scholars. It is only relatively recently that they have turned their attention to the powerful role that social status plays in organizations. This book brings together this important work, showing why we should distinguish status from power, hierarchy and work quality. It also shows how a better understanding of status can be used to address problems in a number of different areas, including strategic acquisitions, the development of innovations, new venture funding, executive compensation, discrimination, and team diversity effects.

• First multidisciplinary study of status in management and organizations • Contributions from leading status scholars and from a variety of international perspectives • Includes new research focusing on emergent, virtual and changing workplaces

Contents

List of figures; List of tables; List of contributors; Foreword; Preface; 1. Introduction: the power of status Jone L. Pearce; Part I. How Status Differences are Legitimated: 2. Divergence in status evaluation: theoretical implications for a social construction view of status building Bilian Ni Sullivan and Daniel Stewart; 3. Maintaining but also changing hierarchies: what social dominance theory has to say James O'Brien and Joerg Dietz; Part II. The Influence of Status on Markets: 4. The importance of status in markets: a market identity perspective Michael Jensen, Bo Kyung Kim and Heeyon Kim; 5. On the need to extend tournament theory through insights from status research Michael Nippa; Part III. The Role of Status in New Industries and Ventures: 6. The cultural context of status: generating important knowledge in nanotechnology Tyler Wry, Michael Lounsbury and Royston Greenwood; 7. Venture launch and growth as a status-building process M. Kim Saxton and Todd Saxton; Part IV. When Ascriptive Status Trumps Achieved Status in Teams: 8. Status cues and expertise assessment in groups: how group members size one another up… and why it matters J. Stuart Bunderson and Michelle A. Barton; 9. The malleability of race in organizational teams: a theory of racial status activation Melissa C. Thomas-Hunt and Katherine W. Phillips; Part V. Status in the Workplace: 10. Resolving conflicts between status distinctiveness in individual identity: a framework of multiple identity displays Kimberly D. Elsbach; 11. Organizational justice and status: theoretical perspectives and promising directions Jerald Greenberg and Deshani B. Ganegoda; Part VI. Developing Status and Management Knowledge: 12. The value of status in management and organization research Jone L. Pearce; Index.

Contributors

Jone L. Pearce, Bilian Ni Sullivan, Daniel Stewart, James O'Brien, Joerg Dietz, Michael Jensen, Bo Kyung Kim, Heeyon Kim, Michael Nippa, Tyler Wry, Michael Lounsbury, Royston Greenwood, M. Kim Saxton, Todd Saxton, Jerald Greenberg, Deshani B. Ganegoda, Kimberly D. Elsbach, Melissa C. Thomas-Hunt, Katherine W. Phillips, J. Stuart Bunderson, Michelle A. Barton

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