TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconsidering the Moral Dimension of Managerial Authority
T2 - A Review and an Integrative Research Agenda
AU - Bernacchio, Caleb
AU - Foss, Nicolai J.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Managerial authority is a fundamental concept within organizational and management research, often understood as a defining feature of organizations. However, far-reaching questions have been raised about its legitimacy as well as its effectiveness as a mechanism of coordination under modern productive conditions. Moreover, there are substantial disagreements concerning its function, characteristic activities, and basis of legitimacy, yet no comprehensive review of this notion exists. We perform such a review, focusing especially on issues of legitimacy and function and how they are related to the moral dimension of managerial authority. In our review, we identified two distinct approaches to managerial authority, namely bureaucratic theories and efficiency-based theories, each involving several variations (five and three, respectively). Drawing together themes from our review, we argue further that, given the many challenges facing managerial authority in a contemporary context, there is a need for an integrative theory of authority that both identifies complementarities between the differing dimensions of authority and attributes a fundamental role to the moral dimension. We outline such a theory and a related research agenda.
AB - Managerial authority is a fundamental concept within organizational and management research, often understood as a defining feature of organizations. However, far-reaching questions have been raised about its legitimacy as well as its effectiveness as a mechanism of coordination under modern productive conditions. Moreover, there are substantial disagreements concerning its function, characteristic activities, and basis of legitimacy, yet no comprehensive review of this notion exists. We perform such a review, focusing especially on issues of legitimacy and function and how they are related to the moral dimension of managerial authority. In our review, we identified two distinct approaches to managerial authority, namely bureaucratic theories and efficiency-based theories, each involving several variations (five and three, respectively). Drawing together themes from our review, we argue further that, given the many challenges facing managerial authority in a contemporary context, there is a need for an integrative theory of authority that both identifies complementarities between the differing dimensions of authority and attributes a fundamental role to the moral dimension. We outline such a theory and a related research agenda.
U2 - 10.5465/annals.2022.0053
DO - 10.5465/annals.2022.0053
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1941-6520
VL - 18
SP - 435
EP - 472
JO - Academy of Management Annals
JF - Academy of Management Annals
IS - 2
ER -