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Social Identity and Organizational Control: Results of an Agent-Based Simulation

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Abstract

It has long been recognised that the identification of organizational members with their organization could mitigate collective action problems. One domain in economics and management addressing these fundamental problems is organizational control, as it focuses on aligning individuals’ behavior with their organization’s objectives. This paper considers organizational identification in interaction with major traits of the organizational context, including the principal means of organizational control. We have used an agent-based simulation based on the framework NK fitness landscapes. In the model, individuals’ organizational identification was endogenous and caused certain effects in the organizations, which then followed on from these effects. The model controlled for different activation mechanisms for individuals’ organizational identity and for different organizational contexts in terms of task complexity and the prevailing coordination mechanism. The results suggest that the activation mechanisms subtly interfere with task complexity and organizational controls. Organizational identification was robustly beneficial across a wide range of task environments when the activation mode corresponds to organizational mission orientation and results controls. Moreover, organizational identification appears particularly relevant when the action controls grant some autonomy to subordinate decision-makers.

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  • Friederike Wall, 2023. "Social Identity and Organizational Control: Results of an Agent-Based Simulation," Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, vol. 26(2), pages 1-1.
  • Handle: RePEc:jas:jasssj:2022-61-2
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    3. Moses Shayo, 2020. "Social Identity and Economic Policy," Annual Review of Economics, Annual Reviews, vol. 12(1), pages 355-389, August.
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