
Changing Capitalisms?
Internationalization, Institutional Change, and Systems of Economic Organization
Oxford University Press
Published on 20. July 2006
Book
Paperback/Softback
480 pages
978-0-19-920528-8 (ISBN)
Description
An increasing number of studies in the last decade or so have emphasized the viability and persistence of distinctive systems of economic coordination and control in developed market economies. Over more or less the same period, the revival of institutional economics and evolutionary approaches to understanding the firm has focused attention on how firms create distinctive capabilities through establishing routines that coordinate complementary activities and skills for particular strategic purposes. For much of the 1990s these two strands of research remained distinct. Those focusing on the institutional frameworks of market economies were primarily concerned with identifying complementarities between institutional arrangements that explained coherence and continuity. On the other hand, those focusing on the dynamics of firm behaviour studied how firms develop new capacities and are able to learn new ways of doing things.
This book aims to bring together these approaches. It consists of a set of theoretically motivated and empirically informed chapters from a range of internationally known contributors to these debates. In their chapters, the authors show how institutions and firms evolve. Ideas of path dependency and complementarity of institutions are subjected to critical scrutiny both by reference to their own internal logic and to empirical examples. Varieties of institutional integration, the surprising maintenance of 'deviant' or alternative traditions and processes, and the existence of unpredictable yet consequential policy options that can lead to breaks in path dependency are scrutinized with particular reference to how national and international firms may relate to institutions at various levels as a diverse arena of potential resources rather than as a singular and determinant constraining force.
The book provides a set of theoretical and empirical challenges for researchers concerned with the relationship between national institutional contexts and firm dynamics. For those involved in teaching or studying at doctoral, Masters and higher level undergraduate courses, the book provides a structured entry into the debates about how institutions and firms are changing in the contemporary era.
This book aims to bring together these approaches. It consists of a set of theoretically motivated and empirically informed chapters from a range of internationally known contributors to these debates. In their chapters, the authors show how institutions and firms evolve. Ideas of path dependency and complementarity of institutions are subjected to critical scrutiny both by reference to their own internal logic and to empirical examples. Varieties of institutional integration, the surprising maintenance of 'deviant' or alternative traditions and processes, and the existence of unpredictable yet consequential policy options that can lead to breaks in path dependency are scrutinized with particular reference to how national and international firms may relate to institutions at various levels as a diverse arena of potential resources rather than as a singular and determinant constraining force.
The book provides a set of theoretical and empirical challenges for researchers concerned with the relationship between national institutional contexts and firm dynamics. For those involved in teaching or studying at doctoral, Masters and higher level undergraduate courses, the book provides a structured entry into the debates about how institutions and firms are changing in the contemporary era.
Reviews / Votes
The authors construct theoretical and empirical accounts of how institutions emerge and change and consider how firms use and reconstitute institutional settings, especially in the context of multinational firms operating across different international concepts. * Book News * The authors construct theoretical and empirical accounts of how institutions emerge and change and consider how firms use and reconstitute institutional settings, especially in the context of multinational firms operating across different international concepts. * Book News *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
705 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-920528-8 (9780199205288)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Glenn Morgan | Richard Whitley | Eli Moen
Changing Capitalisms?
Internationalization, Institutional Change, and Systems of Economic Organization
Book
02/2005
Oxford University Press
€302.70
Shipment within 15-20 days

Richard Whitley And Eli Moen Edited By Glenn Morgan
Changing Capitalisms?
Internationalization, Institutional Change, and Systems of Economic Organization
E-Book
02/2005
1st Edition
OUP
€373.03
Available for download
Persons
Editor
Professor, Warwick Business School
Professor of Organizatonal Sociology in the Manchester Business School, University of Manchester and Professor of Comparative Business Systems at Erasmus University, Rotterdam
Senior Researcher, Department of Culture, University of Oslo
Content
INTRODUCTION ; 1. Changing Capitalisms? Internationalization, Institutionalization, and Systems of Economic Organization ; SECTION I: INSTITUTIONAL COMPLEMENTARITY, CONTRADICTION, AND CHANGE IN BUSINESS SYSTEMS ; 2. Path Dependency, Institutional Complementarity, and Change in National Business Systems ; 3. Degrees of Freedom: Rethinking the Institutional Analysis of Economic Change ; 4. Institutional Transformation and System Change: Changes the Corporate Governance of German Corporations ; 5. Systemic Perspectives on Business Practices and Institutions: A Plea Beyond Comparative Statics ; 6. Rethinking Path Dependency: The Crooked Path of Institutional Change in Postwar Germany ; 7. Complementarity and Fit in the Study of Comparative Capitalisms ; 8. How National are Business Systems? The Role of Different State Types and Complemntary Institutions in Constructing Homogeneous Systems of Economic Coordination and Control ; SECTION 2: CHANGING FIRM CAPABILITIES WITHIN AND ACROSS INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORKS ; 9. The Limited Development of Transnational Organizational Capabilities in Multinational Companies: Institutional Constraints on International Authority Sharing and Careers ; 10. Internationalization and Capability Development in Regulated Professional Service Firms ; 11. Emerging Strategies and Forms of Governance in the Components Industry in High Wage Areas ; 12. Change in Coordinated Market Economies: The Case of Finland and Nokia ; AFTERWORD ; 13. Modelling National Business Systesm and the Civilizing Process ; 14. Institutional Complementarities, Path Dependency, and the Dynamics of Firms