Organisational Flexibility: Core Business, Interdependence and the Timing of Energy Demand

Author:

Blue Stanley1,Shove Elizabeth1,Kurnicki Karol1

Affiliation:

1. Sociology Department Bowland North , Lancaster University , LA1 4YW , Lancaster , UK

Abstract

Abstract Discussions of flexibility in organisations generally focus on labour relations, corporate agility, and long-term survival. In much of this writing, flexibility is conceptualised as a feature of organisations and their environments, of organisational strategy and form, and an outcome of characteristics that can be defined and measured. By contrast, we argue that capacities to adapt depend on interpretations of ‘core business’ which is defined by institutional connections established both outside organisations and reproduced within them. This account is informed by social practice theory, the literature on strategy-as-practice, process studies of organisations, and by empirical research conducted in three secondary schools and three hospitals in Northern England. Interviews with thirty-three managers and employees help us to show how the scope for adaptation is constituted and reproduced in the ways that many organisations connect, and in related rhythms and patterns of social life. There are many contexts in which this insight will be important. We focus on the significance of this analysis for the need to modify the timing of energy demand in a lower carbon future. As we show, the relative ability of specific organisations to adapt depends on a broader nexus of interlinking social practices, temporal arrangements, and cross-cutting commitments.

Funder

UKRI

EPSRC, RCUK Energy Programme and EDF, R&D ECL-EER Programme

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference79 articles.

1. Aaker, David, and Briance Mascarenhas. 1984. “The Need for Strategic Flexibility.” Journal of Business Strategy 5 (2): 74–82. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb039060.

2. Bahrami, Homa. 1992. “The Emerging Flexible Organization: Perspectives from Silicon Valley.” California Management Review 34 (4): 33–52. https://doi.org/10.2307/41166702.

3. Barrett, John, Steve Pye, Sam Betts-Davies, Nick Eyre, Oliver Broad, James Price, Jonathan Norman, et al.. 2021. The Role of Energy Demand Reduction in Achieving Net-Zero in the UK. Oxford: Centre for Research into Energy Demand Solutions. https://www.creds.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/CREDS-Role-of-energy-demand-report-2021.pdf.

4. Blue, Stanley. 2019. “Institutional Rhythms: Combining Practice Theory and Rhythmanalysis to Conceptualise Processes of Institutionalisation.” Time & Society 28 (3): 922–50. https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463x17702165.

5. Blue, Stanley, and Nicola Spurling. 2016. “Qualities of Connective Tissue in Hospital Life: How Complexes of Practices Change.” In The Nexus of Practices: Connections, Constellations, Practitioners, edited by Allison Hui, Theodore Schatzki, and Elizabeth Shove, 36–49. London: Routledge.

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