This edited book is devoted to an issue of increasing importance in management theory and practice-organizational identity. The concept of organizational identity has received attention in many disciplines such as strategic management, marketing, communication and public relations and organization theory. In practice a number of consultancy firms have specialized in identity management, while a number of academic conferences with a special focus on identity has developed. As globalisation of business and of organizations of all kinds become the norm rather than the exception, issues of collective identities take on a strategic importance. There has been, however, very little integration among the various disciplines and practices, resulting in conflicting definitions, and little cumulative research. The aim of Organizational Identities is to further understanding about collective identities by bringing together contributions from various management disciplines. To this end, the editors have developed an integrative framework - the five-facet framework - that allows articulation of contributions from disciplines as diverse as strategic management, organization theory, marketing and communication. Sixteen scholars from Europe and the US have contributed nine chapters that explore various aspects of collective identities using this five-facet framework. The result is the first book to bring together contributions from various fields and integrate them into a single conceptual framework. The book will be useful both for academics and for practitioners. It includes a balance of theoretical and empirical chapters, and presents original empirical data drawn from field research in a variety of settings.
Author(s): Bertrand Moingeon, Guillaume B. Soenen
Edition: 1ST
Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 224
Book Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
List of figures......Page 8
List of tables......Page 10
List of contributors......Page 12
Foreword by......Page 16
Acknowledgments......Page 20
Introduction......Page 22
The dynamics of identities......Page 32
The five facets of collective identities: integrating corporate and organizational identity......Page 34
The hybrid identity of law firms......Page 56
Where do we go from here? Predicting identification among dispersed employees......Page 72
Identities in action......Page 94
Reducing dissonance: closing the gap between projected and attributed identity......Page 96
Manifestations in behavior versus perceptions of identity: convergence or not?......Page 112
Narractive identity: navigating between ~reality~ and ~fiction~......Page 136
Managing identities......Page 152
Creating a new identity for France Telecom: beyond a visual exercise?......Page 154
Conversion of organizational identity research findings into actions......Page 177
Corporate brand and organizational identity......Page 196
Index......Page 216