
Organization scholars have long acknowledged that control processes are
integral to the way in which organizations function. While control
theory research spans many decades and draws on several rich traditions,
theoretical limitations have kept it from generating consistent and
interpretable empirical findings and from reaching consensus concerning
the nature of key relationships. This book reveals how we can overcome
such problems by synthesising diverse, yet complementary, streams of
control research into a theoretical framework and empirical tests that
more fully describe how types of control mechanisms (e.g., the use of
rules, norms, direct supervision or monitoring) aimed at particular
control targets (e.g., input, behavior, output) are applied within
particular types of control systems (i.e., market, clan, bureaucracy,
integrative). Written by a team of distinguished scholars, this book not
only sheds light on the long-neglected phenomenon of organizational
control, it also provides important directions for future research.
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