TY - JOUR
T1 - Translating to Maintain Existing Practices
T2 - Micro-tactics in the Implementation of a New Management Concept
AU - Waldorff, Susanne Boch
AU - Madsen, Marie Henriette
N1 - Published online: 27 Jun 2022.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Research has demonstrated how the translation of a new management concept into organizational practices is impacted by the translators’ engagement with their local context. We expand this literature by demonstrating how a heterogenous institutional context prompts translators to create practice change but also practice maintenance. Building upon an interpretive analytical framework we offer a way forward to examine relationships between societal institutions and distributed collective work in change processes. Our longitudinal qualitative study based upon interviews and observations examines how the concept of value-based healthcare was translated at a hospital. The translators developed three micro-tactics: disregard, maintenance, and displacement, grounded in their narration of practice changes. Translators enacted institutional logics differently at the levels of meaning and practice when they framed, rationalised, and contextualised the potentialities of a new concept, and this complexity provided the possibility of various practice outcomes. We contribute to the understanding of translation by demonstrating how a heterogenous institutional context encourages translators to change selected practices but also to decouple and maintain most of the existing practices due to their enactment of institutionalised rationalities. Moreover, we discuss how translation outcomes are impacted by collaborating actors’ shared interpretations of their institutional context. Collaborating translators need to agree on whether and what practice change is valuable for the organization, and change is only possible when they interpret that they have the leverage to align a new idea with dominant institutional logics.
AB - Research has demonstrated how the translation of a new management concept into organizational practices is impacted by the translators’ engagement with their local context. We expand this literature by demonstrating how a heterogenous institutional context prompts translators to create practice change but also practice maintenance. Building upon an interpretive analytical framework we offer a way forward to examine relationships between societal institutions and distributed collective work in change processes. Our longitudinal qualitative study based upon interviews and observations examines how the concept of value-based healthcare was translated at a hospital. The translators developed three micro-tactics: disregard, maintenance, and displacement, grounded in their narration of practice changes. Translators enacted institutional logics differently at the levels of meaning and practice when they framed, rationalised, and contextualised the potentialities of a new concept, and this complexity provided the possibility of various practice outcomes. We contribute to the understanding of translation by demonstrating how a heterogenous institutional context encourages translators to change selected practices but also to decouple and maintain most of the existing practices due to their enactment of institutionalised rationalities. Moreover, we discuss how translation outcomes are impacted by collaborating actors’ shared interpretations of their institutional context. Collaborating translators need to agree on whether and what practice change is valuable for the organization, and change is only possible when they interpret that they have the leverage to align a new idea with dominant institutional logics.
KW - Translation
KW - Editing
KW - Insitutional logics
KW - Decoupling
KW - Value-based healthcare
KW - Interpretive analytical framework
KW - Micro-tactics
KW - Collaborative translation work
KW - Translation
KW - Editing
KW - Institutional logics
KW - Decoupling
KW - Value-based healthcare
KW - Interpretive analytical framework
KW - Micro-tactics
KW - Collaborative translation work
U2 - 10.1177/01708406221112475
DO - 10.1177/01708406221112475
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0170-8406
VL - 44
SP - 427
EP - 450
JO - Organization Studies
JF - Organization Studies
IS - 3
ER -