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Bricolage as Enacted Sensemaking in Emergent Response Groups: Organizing in Conditions of Extreme Equivocality

  • Ricardo Coelho da Silva
  • , Leid Zejnilovic
  • , Marco Berti*
  • , Miguel Pina e Cunha
  • , Pedro Oliveira
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

When crises strike, new forms of emergent organizing often arise to address urgent societal needs that formal institutions struggle to meet. Among these, emergent response groups (ERGs)—self-organized communities that form to respond to unexpected and extreme events—offer a particularly salient example of decentralized and nonhierarchical organizing. This multicase study investigates eight ERGs that formed during the COVID-19 pandemic to design and distribute critical medical supplies. Drawing on sensemaking theory, we show how bricolage—making do with at-hand resources—supports coordination and community structuring by reducing equivocality caused by distributed actors. Our findings describe how these ERGs grew rapidly by using bricolage to reduce action, goal, and resource equivocality, enabling coordinated and scalable crisis response efforts. We contribute to research on emergent organizing in crisis contexts by revealing how bricolage fosters coherence and rapid scaling in the absence of formal hierarchies. Our study also challenges the dominant assumption that bricolage is inherently limiting to organizational growth, showing that—in the context of self-organizing collectives—it offers a novel solution to the problem of coordinating action among distributed agents.
Original languageEnglish
JournalAcademy of Management Journal
Number of pages28
ISSN0001-4273
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Mar 2026

Bibliographical note

Epub ahead of print. Published online: 18 March 2016.

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