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An Organizational Perspective on Space and Place Branding

In: International Place Branding Yearbook 2010

Author

Listed:
  • Stewart R. Clegg
  • Martin Kornberger

Abstract

Today, it is commonplace to say that we live in what has been called a society of organizations (Perrow 1991), one in which questions of power and control exercised by organizations become crucial. One consequence of this is the ubiquity of theories of organization that focussed on what economists had glossed as the “firm” — without really attending too much to what actually transpired within the great variety of organizations that this term might cover — as well as those many organizations that it might not cover. Economics was interested in the idea of a free market. Initially, the firm was seen as the home of hierarchy — the alternative to markets (Williamson 1975). But the more society, economics and organizations were studied, the greater became the gloss on what occurred within the firm: to accommodate networks, alliances, communities of practice, human and non-human assemblages, rhizomes … until the idea of free market exchange became the exception, not the norm. This shift in perspective has important implications: free market models, known as neoclassical economics, implied that rational actors made decisions based on economic calculations. The social and the political were eliminated from the economic, as well as the cognitive, limits that produce “bounded rationality” (Simon 1982). Against the sterility of the models thus produced, organization theory, which began its career fixated on bureaucracy, developed various antithetical models. Central to all of these are notions of nonnecessity and of choice.

Suggested Citation

  • Stewart R. Clegg & Martin Kornberger, 2010. "An Organizational Perspective on Space and Place Branding," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Frank M. Go & Robert Govers (ed.), International Place Branding Yearbook 2010, chapter 0, pages 3-11, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-0-230-29809-5_1
    DOI: 10.1057/9780230298095_1
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    Cited by:

    1. Laura Ripoll González & Fred Gale, 2020. "Place Branding as Participatory Governance? An Interdisciplinary Case Study of Tasmania, Australia," SAGE Open, , vol. 10(2), pages 21582440209, May.
    2. Juha Halme, 2020. "Representation and power – Discursive constructions of stakeholder positions in regional place marketing collaboration," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 38(7-8), pages 1447-1464, November.

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