To read this content please select one of the options below:

Towards micro-foundations of institutional change: Lessons from Douglass C. North’s sociocognitive turn

Kyle Bruce (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia)
Peter von Staden (Kedge Business School, Marseille, France)

Journal of Management History

ISSN: 1751-1348

Article publication date: 12 June 2017

466

Abstract

Purpose

Given managerial choices and the sociocultural context in which they are made are at the heart of management history, then an understanding of both is critical. This paper argues that the “late” North (2005) provides such an understanding.

Design/methodology/approach

This study is a research review synthesizing much disparate but cognate literature across the new institutionalism in organizational sociology/studies and in economics.

Findings

“Late” North (2005) provides an important ontological frame for dealing with the so-called “paradox of embedded agency”, an approach that may afford management historians a more thorough account of how institutions are formed and change over time. North has always maintained that institutional change is the outcome of deliberate or intentional choices made by actors. However, and unlike his earlier work which ignores how humans come to make the said choices, North (2005) explicates the sociocognitive process by which intentionality emerges with expanded consciousness, as humans construct ideas and beliefs about reality, beliefs that shape decisions to alter the said reality via the process of institutional change.

Originality/value

It is rather curious that despite North’s status as a “historian”, management historians – or at least those publishing in this journal from its founding in 1995 – do not seem to be terribly interested in North’s work. Although North rates a mention in rival journals, other than Dagnino and Quattrone’s (2006) study, papers in this journal invoking institutional theory align with the new institutionalism in organizational sociology/studies (NIOS) rather than North’s new institutional economics (NIE). Even in the related sub-discipline of business history, those professing an interest in institutions are more interested in the NIE of non-historians Coase and Oliver Williamson than they are in North’s NIE. And, in recent work analysing the place and significance of institutional theory in historical research, the foundations are unmistakeably NIOS rather than North’s NIE.

Keywords

Citation

Bruce, K. and von Staden, P. (2017), "Towards micro-foundations of institutional change: Lessons from Douglass C. North’s sociocognitive turn", Journal of Management History, Vol. 23 No. 3, pp. 223-240. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMH-03-2017-0011

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles