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Identity, Compliance and Dissent in Organizations:
A Psychoanalytical Perspective
Much of the literature in organization theory has yielded an image
of the individual which could be called 'skilfully partial'. The
viewpoints talk 'about' human agency without having a view 'of'
human agency, turning what is a 'process' into an 'object'. Other
viewpoints raise the same dichotomy, without an underlying theoretic
about the dynamic between the two. An example of this difficulty
is apparent in the literature that seeks to address the issues of
compliance and dissent in organizations. There is little in the
way of explanation of the psychodynamics that are involved. This
paper puts forward an explanation of compliance and dissent in organizations
and explains how these issues are very much intertwined with the
dynamic processes involved in the construction of individual identity.
This explanation recognizes the importance of individual experiential
histories, including those that are specifically institutionally
fashioned, such as gender and the primacy of work. Drawing upon
psychoanalytical theory (with some of its Frankfurt School and other
variants), an essential lens is provided through which the issues
of compliance and dissent can readily be viewed and understood.
Results from recent studies are used to illustrate this different
perspective, and the psychodynamics that are put forward are discussed
in terms of further implications for the field.
[Abstract from Organization]
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